98-23963. Implementation of Competitive Bidding for Commercial Broadcast and Instructional Television Fixed Service Licenses  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 176 (Friday, September 11, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 48615-48633]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-23963]
    
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    
    47 CFR Parts 1, 73 and 74
    
    [MM Docket No. 97-234, GC Docket No. 92-52, and GEN Docket No. 90-264; 
    FCC 98-194]
    
    
    Implementation of Competitive Bidding for Commercial Broadcast 
    and Instructional Television Fixed Service Licenses
    
    AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This First Report and Order (First R&O) implements the Federal 
    Communications Commission's amended auction authority. Specifically, 
    the First R&O adopts rules and procedures for auctioning pending and 
    future mutually exclusive applications for construction permits in the 
    various commercial broadcast services; determines that competing 
    Instructional Television Fixed Service (ITFS) applications are subject 
    to auction; and adopts procedures for resolving pending broadcast 
    comparative renewal cases, in which the Commission is not authorized to 
    use auctions. To further the goals of the designated entity provisions 
    of the Commission's auction authority, the First R&O adopts a tiered 
    ``new entrant'' bidding credit for entities with controlling interests 
    in either no, or less than four, other media entities. The First R&O 
    notes that the Commission intends to continue its review of the 
    barriers to entry or growth that may exist for small, minority- and 
    women-owned businesses in broadcasting, and to make adjustments to its 
    designated entity provisions, as appropriate, in light of these 
    studies.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: November 10, 1998.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jerianne Timmerman, Video Services 
    Division, Mass Media Bureau at (202) 418-1600; Lisa Scanlan, Audio 
    Services Division, Mass Media Bureau at (202) 418-2720; Lee Martin, 
    Office of General Counsel at (202) 418-1720.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Summary
    
        This First R&O implements: (1) amended Section 309(j) of the 
    Communications Act (Act), which requires that the Commission use 
    auctions to select from among virtually all mutually exclusive 
    applications for initial licenses and construction permits, including 
    broadcast construction permits, and (2) new Section 309(l) of the Act, 
    which
    
    [[Page 48616]]
    
    authorizes auctions to resolve pending comparative licensing cases 
    involving applications for full-service commercial radio or television 
    stations filed before July 1, 1997. As proposed in this proceeding, the 
    First R&O amends the disparate application procedures for the various 
    broadcast services to establish a uniform window filing approach that 
    should facilitate the determination of mutually exclusive groups of 
    applications for auction purposes, and also establishes rules and 
    procedures for auctioning mutually exclusive applications for broadcast 
    construction permits that follow, as closely as possible, the 
    Commission's general part 1 auction rules.
    
    General Authority to Use Competitive Bidding to Award Secondary and 
    Primary Commercial Broadcast Licenses
    
        2. Under amended Section 309(j)(1), the Commission found that 
    auctions are mandatory for all secondary commercial broadcast services 
    (e.g., LPTV, FM translator and television translator services). 
    Similarly, the Commission found that, except for certain pending 
    applications that are subject to new Section 309(l), its auction 
    authority is mandatory, rather than permissive, for all full power 
    commercial radio and analog television stations. Nothing in the 
    statutory language or in the accompanying legislative history indicates 
    that the requirement to use competitive bidding for ``any initial 
    license or construction permit'' is limited to full power radio and 
    analog television stations, or that Congress intended such a 
    limitation. Nor are secondary commercial broadcast service licenses 
    exempted from the auction requirement under Section 309(j)(2), which 
    enumerates the certain types of spectrum licenses that are not subject 
    to competitive bidding.
        3. The Commission stated further that all pending mutually 
    exclusive applications for these secondary broadcast services must be 
    resolved through a system of competitive bidding. Nothing in Section 
    309(j)(1) suggests that the requirement to use auctions applies only to 
    applications filed in the future. The only statutory reference to 
    pending applications is contained in Section 309(l), and the Commission 
    determined that Congress did not intend to include pending secondary 
    broadcast applications within Section 309(l).
    
    Statutory Authority to Use Competitive Bidding for Modification 
    Applications
    
        4. The Commission concluded that it is not precluded by the terms 
    of Section 309(j) from auctioning mutually exclusive modification 
    applications. The Commission recognized, however, that competing major 
    modification applications can often be resolved by changes to the 
    engineering proposals submitted by applicants and may raise special 
    considerations where settlements are particularly appropriate. The 
    Commission will therefore allow applicants who have, under the window 
    filing procedures adopted in the First R&O for new station applications 
    and major modification applications, filed either competing major 
    modification applications, or competing major modification and new 
    station applications, to resolve their mutual exclusivities by means of 
    engineering solutions or settlements during a limited period after the 
    filing of short-form applications but before the start of the auction. 
    The Commission stated that it would apply competitive bidding 
    procedures to resolve mutual exclusivities among major modification 
    applications and between major modification and initial applications, 
    if the parties are unable to resolve their mutual exclusivities during 
    a limited period, as established by public notice, following the filing 
    of short-form applications.
        5, The Commission determined that it would not, however, generally 
    subject competing minor modification applications to auction 
    procedures. Given the infrequency with which minor modification 
    applications are mutually exclusive and the less significant changes 
    usually proposed in minor modification applications, the Commission 
    will encourage parties ``to use engineering solutions, negotiation * * 
    * and other means'' to resolve any mutual exclusivities. 47 U.S.C. 
    309(j)(6)(E).
    
    Statutory Exemption for Noncommercial Educational and Public 
    Broadcast Stations
    
        6. The Commission determined that it had not received sufficiently 
    focused comment to finally resolve in this proceeding the issues 
    relating to noncommercial educational and public broadcast stations. 
    While the exemption in Section 309(j)(2)(C) for noncommercial 
    educational broadcasters clearly precludes the Commission from using 
    competitive bidding to award broadcast station licenses on the reserved 
    noncommercial frequencies, there are difficult issues as to how the 
    Commission should apply this provision when noncommercial educational 
    and public broadcasters apply for frequencies in the commercial band. 
    The Commission found that its decision on these issues would be aided 
    by a further round of comment. Therefore, the Commission stated that it 
    would not proceed to auction at this time any pending cases where both 
    noncommercial and commercial applicants have filed competing 
    applications for nonreserved channels; these cases will be resolved 
    following the release of a report and order in our noncommercial 
    proceeding, MM Docket No. 95-31.
    
    Discretion to Use Auctions in Pending Cases Involving pre-July 1, 
    1997 Applications
    
        7. The Commission found that it has discretion under new Section 
    309(l) to resolve comparative licensing proceedings that involve pre-
    July 1, 1997 applications for full service commercial radio and 
    television stations by either competitive bidding procedures or through 
    the comparative hearing process. The explicit language of Section 
    309(l)(1) provides that the Commission ``shall have the authority to 
    conduct a competitive bidding proceeding,'' in contrast to the 
    mandatory language of Section 309(j)(1) providing that ``the Commission 
    shall grant the license . . . through a system of competitive 
    bidding.'' The Commission concluded that the language of Section 309(l) 
    unambiguously addresses a situation in which auctions are permissible, 
    but are not required.
    
    Public Interest Considerations Favoring Resolution of Pending Cases 
    by Competitive Bidding
    
        8. The Commission stated that auctions will generally be fairer and 
    more expeditious than deciding the pending mutually exclusive 
    applications filed before July 1, 1997 through the comparative hearing 
    process. Auctions will generally expedite service and better serve the 
    public interest in these cases, because competitive bidding is a more 
    efficient and cost-effective method of assigning spectrum in cases of 
    mutual exclusivity than any previously employed method. The Commission 
    concluded that there is no inherent unfairness in using auctions, 
    rather than comparative hearings, to resolve mutual exclusivity among 
    these pre-July 1, 1997 applications, as most of these applicants filed 
    after Bechtel v. FCC, 10 F.3d 875 (D.C. Cir. 1993), which made it clear 
    that some change in the existing selection criteria was inevitable. The 
    Commission also found that changing the selection process for pending 
    applications filed before July 1, 1997 is not impermissibly retroactive 
    or
    
    [[Page 48617]]
    
    otherwise unlawful. The pre-July 1, 1997 applicants, whether their 
    applications are pending on the processing line or have been designated 
    for hearing, have no vested right to a comparative hearing that is 
    abridged by the Commission's decision to award such authorizations by a 
    system of competitive bidding. The Commission moreover noted that the 
    impact of this regulatory change is ameliorated somewhat by the 
    statutory requirement that auctions to resolve these pre-July 1 pending 
    cases be closed to other participants.
    
    Treatment of Pending Hearing Cases
    
        9. The Commission concluded that, even for the small number of 
    pending cases involving pre-July 1, 1997 applications that have 
    progressed at least through an Initial Decision by an Administrative 
    Law Judge, auctions better serve the public interest than comparative 
    hearings. While these pending applicants have spent considerable time 
    and money prosecuting their applications and have experienced 
    significant delays in obtaining a final decision as to the selection of 
    the licensee, these circumstances do not, the Commission determined, 
    outweigh the additional delays, uncertainty and administrative costs 
    that would be incurred by resolving these cases through the comparative 
    hearing process.
    
    Scope of Section 309(l)
    
        10. The Commission found that, where post-June 30th applications 
    are mutually exclusive with two or more pre-July 1, 1997 applications, 
    it is compelled by the express language of Section 309(l)(2) to dismiss 
    them and conduct a competitive bidding procedure that is restricted to 
    the pre-July 1, 1997 applications. The Commission also stated that, 
    given the express reference to ``competing applications'' in Section 
    309(l), this provision does not apply to a single pre-July 1, 1997 
    application. Under Section 309(l)(2), the Commission is statutorily 
    precluded from permitting post-June 30th applicants to participate as 
    qualified bidders in a competitive bidding procedure conducted to 
    resolve mutual exclusivity among two or more pre-July 1, 1997 competing 
    applications. The First R&O notes that the practical effect of this 
    distinction between applications filed before July 1st and after June 
    30th will be limited, as the Commission believes that settlement 
    agreements have been filed in connection with the small number of cases 
    involving post-June 30th applications mutually exclusive with two or 
    more pre-July 1, 1997 applications.
    
    Pending Applications Not Subject to Section 309(l)
    
        11. The most significant issue with regard to the pending 
    applications falling outside the scope of Section 309(l) concerns the 
    pool of bidders who will be eligible for any auction of these mutually 
    exclusive applications. Specifically, the Commission has the discretion 
    to restrict the class of eligible bidders to those with applications 
    already filed, or to reopen the filing period for additional applicants 
    that would be eligible to participate in the auction. The Commission 
    concluded that, in cases of pending mutually exclusive applications not 
    subject to Section 309(l) where the relevant period or window for 
    filing applications under the existing procedures has expired, the 
    public interest would not be served by reopening the filing period for 
    additional mutually exclusive applications. The Commission found no 
    compelling reason to reopen filing windows that have already expired to 
    permit the filing of additional applications by applicants who failed 
    to file during the Commission's previously clearly delineated filing 
    periods.
        12. The Commission noted, however, that there are pending a number 
    of broadcast applications (primarily AM and FM translator) that have 
    never been subjected to competition because periods or windows for the 
    filing of competing applications have not yet been opened by the 
    Commission. Rather than open individual filing windows or issue 
    individual cut-off lists for each of these pending broadcast 
    applications, the Commission decided that it would be more efficient to 
    simply include these applications in the first general auction 
    conducted for new applicants in the relevant service.
    
    Competitive Bidding Design
    
        13. The Commission announced that it would conduct all auctions of 
    mutually exclusive broadcast applications in conformity with the 
    general competitive bidding rules set forth in part 1 of the 
    Commission's rules. However, because the same type of auction 
    methodology may not be appropriate for all mutually exclusive broadcast 
    and secondary broadcast applications, different approaches may be 
    warranted to resolve mutual exclusivity among certain categories of 
    broadcast applications and for ``daisy chain'' situations. The 
    Commission concluded that the appropriate auction design will vary 
    depending on the type of service involved, the number of construction 
    permits at stake, how many bidders are likely to participate, and the 
    degree to which interdependence may be important to those likely to bid 
    on a particular type of permit. The Commission delegated authority to 
    the Mass Media Bureau and the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau (the 
    Bureaus) to seek comment on and establish an appropriate auction design 
    methodology prior to the start of each broadcast auction or group of 
    broadcast auctions. The Commission also delegated to the Bureaus 
    authority to seek comment on and, as appropriate, to establish upfront 
    payments, minimum opening bids and/or reserve prices for each broadcast 
    auction or group of broadcast auctions.
    
    Auction Application Procedures
    
        14. The Commission will follow for all broadcast service auctions 
    the procedural and payment rules set forth in the general part 1 
    auction rules, with certain modifications. Specifically, the First R&O 
    replaces the Commission's disparate filing procedures for the various 
    broadcast services with a specific time period, or auction window, 
    during which all applicants seeking to participate in an auction must 
    file their applications for new broadcast facilities or for major 
    changes to existing facilities. Applicants will be required to submit 
    only a short-form application (FCC Form 175) prior to any auction, and 
    only winning bidders will need to file complete long-forms (FCC Form 
    301 for AM, FM and television stations, FCC Form 346 for LPTV and 
    television translators, or FCC Form 349 for FM translators). 
    Specifically, in response to a public notice announcing a window for 
    the filing of broadcast and/or secondary broadcast applications for new 
    stations and for major changes to existing facilities, applicants will 
    be required to file a short-form application, along with any 
    engineering data necessary to determine mutual exclusivity in a 
    particular service. The Commission stated that, prior to auction, it 
    would examine the engineering data submitted by applicants for the non-
    table services (AM, LPTV, and television and FM translators) only to 
    the extent necessary to determine the mutually exclusive groups of 
    applications for auction purposes. Applicants for FM stations need not 
    submit any engineering data in addition to their FCC Form 175 
    applications, as such data is not needed to make determinations of 
    mutual exclusivity in the FM service.
        15. The Commission determined to follow the general auction rule 
    mandating electronic filing, and will
    
    [[Page 48618]]
    
    require all applicants for broadcast auctions to file their FCC Form 
    175 applications electronically beginning January 1, 1999, unless it is 
    not operationally feasible. Applicants for non-table services, who must 
    submit engineering information with their short-forms, will be required 
    to file the engineering section of the electronic versions of the FCC 
    Forms 301, 346 and 349, which are currently being developed.
        16. Consistent with the part 1 anti-collusion rule, the Commission 
    announced that applicants in broadcast auctions will be required to 
    identify on their short-form applications any parties with whom they 
    have entered into any consortium arrangements, joint ventures, 
    partnerships or other agreements or understandings which relate in any 
    way to the competitive bidding process. In addition, applicants will be 
    required to certify on their short-form applications that they have not 
    entered into any explicit or implicit agreements, arrangements or 
    understandings of any kind with any parties, other than those 
    identified, regarding the amount of their bids, bidding strategies, or 
    the particular construction permits on which they will or will not bid. 
    After short-form applications are filed and prior to the time that the 
    winning bidder has made its required down payment, all bidders will be 
    prohibited from cooperating, collaborating, discussing or disclosing in 
    any manner the substance of their bids or bidding strategies with other 
    bidders that have applied to bid in the same geographic license area, 
    unless such bidders are members of a bidding consortium or other joint 
    bidding arrangement identified on the bidder's short-form application.
        17. The Commission also determined to follow in broadcast auctions 
    the general part 1 auction rules with regard to post-auction 
    procedures, including the payment by winning bidders of their bids and 
    the withdrawal, default and disqualification of winning bidders. The 
    First R&O additionally adopted a shortened 10-day period for the filing 
    of petitions to deny against the long-form applications filed by 
    auction winners.
    
    Designated Entities
    
        18. Due to the insufficiency of the record in this proceeding, the 
    First R&O does not make a final determination regarding the adoption of 
    bidding credits or other special measures to enhance participation by 
    various designated entities, including small, minority- and women-owned 
    businesses, in broadcast service and ITFS auctions. The First R&O does 
    adopt a tiered new entrant bidding credit to further the goals of the 
    designated entity provisions of Section 309(j); specifically, 
    applicants with no controlling interests in any media outlets will 
    receive a 35% bidding credit, and applicants with controlling interests 
    in no more than three media outlets, none of which serve the same area 
    as the proposed station, will receive a 25% bidding credit. Following 
    the completion of certain pending evidentiary studies, the Commission 
    anticipates the release of a further report and order in this 
    proceeding addressing designated entity issues in the broadcast 
    context. If additional or alternative designated entity measures are 
    ultimately adopted in this further order following the completion of 
    the Commission's evidentiary studies, then any such measures will be 
    applicable to the auction of any broadcast and ITFS applications then 
    on file with the Commission. To prevent any unjust enrichment by 
    designated entities utilizing the new entrant bidding credit, we will 
    follow the general part 1 auction rules in requiring, under certain 
    circumstances involving assignments or transfers, the reimbursement of 
    bidding credits utilized in obtaining broadcast licenses via auction.
    
    Auction Authority for Instructional Television Fixed Service
    
        19. The Commission determined that, because Section 309(j) 
    generally requires the use of competitive bidding to resolve mutually 
    exclusive applications with only certain specified exemptions, it does 
    not have the discretion to create another exemption from competitive 
    bidding for ITFS. When Congress explicitly enumerates certain 
    exceptions to a general requirement, additional exceptions should not 
    be implied, and the list of exemptions from the Commission's general 
    auction authority set forth in Section 309(j)(2) is clearly exhaustive, 
    rather than merely illustrative, of the types of licenses or permits 
    that may not be awarded through a system of competitive bidding. 
    Because ITFS is not one of the services exempted from competitive 
    bidding in Section 309(j)(2), the First R&O concludes that competing 
    ITFS applications must be subjected to competitive bidding procedures. 
    The Commission declined to interpret the exemption from competitive 
    bidding for noncommercial educational broadcast stations contained in 
    Section 309(j)(2)(C) to include ITFS. As the Commission has stated and 
    the courts have recognized, ITFS is not a broadcast service, and 
    therefore it does not fall within the scope of the Section 309(j)(2)(C) 
    exemption from competitive bidding for noncommercial broadcasters.
        20. The Commission stated, however, that it will request that 
    Congress amend Section 309(j) so that the statute clearly reflects its 
    intent with regard to ITFS. Absent a clear statement from Congress that 
    it means to exempt ITFS from competitive bidding, then the Commission 
    will proceed with the auction of mutually exclusive ITFS applications. 
    The Commission stated that it will not commence ITFS auctions 
    immediately so as to allow sufficient time to obtain Congressional 
    guidance.
        21. The Commission found that pending ITFS applications are outside 
    the scope of new Section 309(l) of the Act, which provides that the 
    Commission has discretion regarding the resolution of pending 
    comparative licensing proceedings involving pre-July 1, 1997 
    applications for commercial radio and television stations. Accordingly, 
    pending mutually exclusive ITFS applications must be resolved by 
    competitive bidding pursuant to Section 309(j)(1). However, the 
    Commission determined that it would not serve the public interest to 
    accept additional competing ITFS applications despite its authority to 
    do so; thus, the eligible bidders in any auction of the pending ITFS 
    applications will be limited to those with applications already on 
    file.
    
    Resolution of Pending Comparative Renewal Proceedings
    
        22. With regard to the very small number of pending comparative 
    renewal proceedings, the Commission determined that the most equitable 
    and expeditious approach would be simply to permit the renewal 
    applicants and their challengers, within the confines of the generally 
    phrased standard comparative issue, to present the factors and evidence 
    they believe most appropriate. If the renewal applicant can demonstrate 
    substantial performance and thus an entitlement to a renewal 
    expectancy, this will continue to be the most important factor and can 
    be expected in most cases to outweigh other considerations in favor of 
    the challenger.
        23. The complete text of this First R&O, including any statements, 
    is available for inspection and copying during normal business hours in 
    the Federal Communications Commission Reference Center (Room 239), 1919 
    M Street, N.W., Washington, D.C., and it may be purchased from the 
    Commission's copy contractor, International Transcription Service,
    
    [[Page 48619]]
    
    Inc., 1231 20th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036, (202)857-3800.
    
    Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA)
    
    Summary
    
        24. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 
    603, an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated 
    in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) in this proceeding. The 
    Commission sought written public comments on the proposals in the NPRM, 
    including on the IRFA. The Commission's Final Regulatory Flexibility 
    Analysis (FRFA) in this First R&O conforms to the RFA, as amended by 
    the Contract With America Advancement Act of 1996, Public Law 104-121, 
    110 Stat. 847 (1996).
    
    Need For and Objectives of Action
    
        25. This First R&O adopts rules to implement the Balanced Budget 
    Act of 1997 (Budget Act), Public Law 105-33, 111 Stat. 251 (1997), 
    which amended Section 309(j) and adopted new Section 309(l) of the 
    Communications Act to expand the Commission's competitive bidding 
    authority to include, inter alia, the commercial broadcast and 
    secondary broadcast services.
    
    Significant Issues Raised by the Public in Response to the Initial 
    Analysis
    
        26. No comments were received specifically in response to the IRFA 
    contained in the NPRM. However, some comments did address certain small 
    business issues. A number of commenters called for the adoption of 
    bidding credits for small businesses to ensure their participation in 
    broadcast spectrum auctions. To promote diversification of ownership of 
    broadcast stations, a number of commenters also supported the adoption 
    of bidding credits for non-group owners, who would likely be small 
    businesses. Some commenters argued that upfront payments should be 
    small enough to allow small businesses to compete effectively. 
    Commenters generally opposed the use of competitive bidding for 
    selecting among mutually exclusive Instructional Television Fixed 
    Service (ITFS) applicants, who are primarily educational institutions 
    and governmental educational entities.
        27. Small business-related issues were also raised by commenters 
    more indirectly. A small number of commenters opposed requiring 
    prospective bidders in broadcast auctions to file their short-form 
    applications (FCC Form 175) electronically, contending that electronic 
    filing would be a barrier to participation by those not computer 
    literate or by low power television (LPTV) and translator applicants 
    (many of whom are small businesses). Several commenters also asked the 
    Commission to reconfirm its support for certain previously-adopted 
    special measures to protect LPTV and television translator stations 
    that are displaced during the transition to digital television. A small 
    number of commenters additionally contended that it was unfair or 
    inequitable to auction secondary broadcast services (LPTV and 
    television and FM translators), the licensees of which tend to be small 
    businesses.
    
    Description and Number of Small Entities Involved
    
        28. Under the RFA, small entities include small organizations, 
    small businesses, and small governmental jurisdictions. 5 U.S.C. 
    601(6). The RFA, 5 U.S.C. 601(3), defines the term ``small business'' 
    as having the same meaning as the term ``small business concern'' under 
    the Small Business Act. See 15 U.S.C. 632. 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 Small Business Administration (SBA). Pursuant to the 
    RFA, the statutory definition of a small business applies when 
    considering the impact of an agency's action(s) ``unless an agency 
    after consultation with the Office of Advocacy of the SBA and after 
    opportunity for public comment, established one or more definitions of 
    such term which are appropriate to the activities of the agency and 
    publishes such definition(s) in the Federal Register.''
        29. In the NPRM we stated that we tentatively believe that the 
    SBA's definition of ``small business'' greatly overstates the number of 
    radio and television broadcast stations that are small businesses and 
    is not particularly suitable for the Commission's purposes, and we 
    sought comment on how we should define small business for this purpose. 
    While we utilized the SBA's definition to determine the number of small 
    businesses to which any auction procedures would apply, we reserved the 
    right to adopt a more suitable definition of ``small business'' as 
    applied to radio and television broadcast stations. We received no 
    comment in response to the IRFA on how to define radio and television 
    broadcast ``small businesses.'' Therefore, we will continue to utilize 
    the SBA's definitions for the purposes of this FRFA.
        30. Radio Broadcasting Stations. The SBA defines a radio 
    broadcasting station that has no more than $5 million in annual 
    receipts as a small business. A radio broadcasting station is an 
    establishment primarily engaged in broadcasting aural programs by radio 
    to the public. Included in this industry are commercial, religious, 
    educational, and other radio stations. Radio broadcasting stations 
    which primarily are engaged in radio broadcasting and which produce 
    radio program materials are similarly included. Official Commission 
    records indicate that 11,334 individual radio stations were operating 
    in 1992. The 1992 Census indicates that 96 percent of radio station 
    establishments (5,861 of 6,127) produced less than $5 million in 
    revenue in 1992. As of May 31, 1998, official Commission records 
    indicate that 4,724 AM radio stations, 7,595 FM radio stations and 
    3,011 FM translator/booster stations were licensed. We conclude a 
    similarly high percentage (96 percent) of current radio broadcasting 
    licensees are small entities.
        31. Television Broadcasting Stations. The SBA defines a television 
    broadcasting station that is independently owned and operated, is not 
    dominant in its field of operation, and has no more than $10.5 million 
    in annual receipts as a small business. Television broadcasting 
    stations consist of establishments primarily engaged in broadcasting 
    visual programs by television to the public, except cable and other pay 
    television services. Included in this industry are commercial, 
    religious, educational, and other television stations. Also included 
    are establishments primarily engaged in television broadcasting and 
    which produce taped television program materials. There were 1,509 
    television stations operating in the nation in 1992. In 1992, there 
    were 1,155 television station establishments that produced less than 
    $10.0 million in revenue (76.5 percent). As of May 31, 1998, official 
    Commission records indicate that 1,579 full power television stations, 
    2089 low power television stations, and 4924 television translator 
    stations were licensed. We conclude that a similarly high percentage of 
    current television broadcasting licensees are small entities (76.5 
    percent).
        32. ITFS. In addition, there are presently 2032 ITFS licensees. All 
    but 100 of these licenses are held by educational institutions. 
    Educational institutions may be included in the definition of a small 
    entity. ITFS is a non-pay, non-commercial educational microwave service 
    that, depending on
    
    [[Page 48620]]
    
    SBA categorization, has, as small entities, entities generating either 
    $10.5 million or less, or $11.0 million or less, in annual receipts. 
    However, we do not collect, nor are we aware of other collections of, 
    annual revenue data for ITFS licensees. Thus, we conclude that up to 
    1932 of these licensees are small entities.
        33. Pending and Future Applicants Affected by Rulemaking. The 
    auction procedures set forth in the First R&O will affect pending and 
    future competing applicants for the various commercial broadcast 
    services and for ITFS. We estimate that, as of the adoption date of the 
    First R&O, there are approximately: (1) 700 mutually exclusive pending 
    applications for commercial radio stations; (2) 200 pending competing 
    applications for full power commercial analog television stations; (3) 
    100 mutually exclusive pending applications for low power television 
    stations and television translator stations; (4) 30 competing 
    applications for FM translator stations; and (5) 200 or more mutually 
    exclusive pending applications for ITFS stations. The Commission has no 
    data on file as to whether entities with pending permit applications, 
    which are subject to the new auction rules adopted for the broadcast 
    services, meet the SBA's definition of a small business concern. 
    However, we conclude that, given the smaller size of the markets at 
    issue in the pending applications, most of the entities with pending 
    applications for a permit to construct a new primary or secondary 
    broadcast station are small entities, as defined by the SBA rules. It 
    is not possible, at this time, to estimate the number of markets for 
    which mutually exclusive applications will be received in the future, 
    nor the number of entities that in the future may seek a construction 
    permit for a new broadcast station. Given the fact that fewer new 
    stations (particularly fewer analog television stations) will be 
    licensed in the future and that these stations generally will be 
    located in smaller, more rural areas, we conclude that most of the 
    entities applying for these stations will be small entities, as defined 
    by the SBA rules.
    
    Summary of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other Compliance 
    Requirements
    
        34. The First R&O adopts a number of rules that include reporting, 
    recordkeeping, and compliance requirements. These requirements will 
    apply to all applicants subject to the new competitive bidding 
    procedures, as more fully detailed in the First R&O (referred to in 
    this section more generally as ``applicants'').
        35. Applicants will be required to submit a short-form application 
    (FCC Form 175) prior to any auction. Only winning bidders will need to 
    file complete long-forms (FCC Form 301 for AM, FM and television 
    stations, FCC Form 346 for LPTV and television translators, or FCC Form 
    349 for FM translators). Specifically, in response to a public notice 
    announcing a window for the filing of broadcast and/or secondary 
    broadcast applications for new stations and for major changes in 
    existing facilities, applicants will be required to file a short-form 
    application, along with any engineering data necessary to determine 
    mutual exclusivity in a particular service. Applicants for broadcast 
    auctions will be required to follow the general auction rules, 47 CFR 
    1.2105, with regard to completion of the short form and exhibits to be 
    submitted with the short form. Also consistent with the Commission's 
    general part 1 auction rules, all applicants for broadcast auctions 
    must file their FCC Form 175 applications electronically beginning 
    January 1, 1999.
        36. Applicants may be subject to upfront payments, minimum opening 
    bids and/or reserve prices in order to participate in broadcast service 
    auctions. The Mass Media Bureau in conjunction with the Wireless 
    Telecommunications Bureau shall seek public comment on and, as 
    appropriate, shall establish these mechanisms for each auction, or 
    group of auctions, in the broadcast services.
        37. Following the close of bidding in an auction, winning bidders 
    will be required to submit a down payment, file an appropriate long-
    form application for each construction permit for which it was the high 
    bidder, and pay the balance of their winning bids in a timely manner. 
    Broadcast auction participants will also be subject to the bid 
    withdrawal, default and disqualification payments set forth in the 
    general part 1 auction rules.
        38. A licensee, or holder of a construction permit, who utilized a 
    new entrant bidding credit will be required to reimburse the government 
    for the amount of the bidding credit, plus interest, as a condition for 
    Commission approval of the assignment or transfer of the license or 
    permit to an entity that would not have qualified for the new entrant 
    credit, as generally provided in the Commission's part 1 rules.
    
    Steps Taken to Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small Entities, 
    and Significant Alternatives Considered
    
        39. Due to the insufficiency of the record in this proceeding, the 
    First R&O does not make a final determination regarding the adoption of 
    bidding credits or other special measures to enhance participation by 
    various designated entities, including small businesses, in broadcast 
    service and ITFS auctions. Such measures will be considered in a 
    further report and order to be issued at a later time. For all auctions 
    held prior to ultimate resolution of the designated entity issue, the 
    First R&O adopts a tiered new entrant bidding credit for entities with 
    controlling interests in either no, or less than four, other media 
    entities so as to enhance participation by small businesses and other 
    designated entities, including small businesses owned by women and 
    minority group members. Following the completion of certain pending 
    evidentiary studies, the Commission may, in a further report and order 
    in this proceeding, adopt additional or alternative bidding credits or 
    other measures that more directly alleviate any adverse impact on small 
    businesses (including those owned by women or by minority group 
    members) of the requirement to participate in an auction to obtain a 
    construction permit to provide commercial broadcast service. If 
    additional or alternative designated entity measures are ultimately 
    adopted, then any such measures will be applicable to the auction of 
    any broadcast and ITFS applications then on file with the Commission.
        40. Moreover, even if further special measures are not ultimately 
    adopted, we believe that some of the competitive bidding procedures 
    adopted in this First R&O reduce the time and cost of securing 
    commercial broadcast and ITFS licenses to the ultimate benefit of small 
    businesses. For example, entities interested in bidding for broadcast 
    station permits will not be required to submit a long-form application 
    prior to auction. We will require only that a short-form application be 
    submitted prior to auction, although applicants in the non-table 
    services will be required to submit the engineering data necessary to 
    make determinations of mutual exclusivity. The procedures adopted here 
    further expedite service to the public, thereby reducing the cost to 
    small entities of participating in these auctions, by limiting our pre-
    auction application processing to what is necessary to determine mutual 
    exclusivity.
    
    [[Page 48621]]
    
        41. After careful consideration and in light of Congress' directive 
    in the Budget Act, we found that a shortened period of 10 days is 
    appropriate for the filing of petitions to deny against the long-form 
    applications filed by broadcast auction winners. We have also 
    eliminated the requirement that applicants affirmatively certify their 
    financial qualifications and the availability of their proposed tower 
    locations in their applications.
        42. We recognize that, despite the efficiency of auctions and the 
    resulting reduction in the costs associated with filing an application, 
    having to participate in an auction may limit the opportunities 
    available to small businesses. However, except for certain commercial 
    broadcast applications filed before July 1, 1997, Section 309(j)(1) 
    requires that the Commission use competitive bidding procedures to 
    award virtually all construction permits for commercial broadcast 
    stations where mutually exclusive applications are filed. After 
    carefully considering the comments, we determined that auctions are 
    statutorily required to resolve mutually exclusive secondary broadcast 
    service applications, as nothing in the statute or in the legislative 
    history reflects an intention to limit Section 309(j)(1) to full power 
    radio and television applications.
        43. Relying on the fact that the exemption from competitive bidding 
    set forth in Section 309(j)(2) is expressly limited to noncommercial 
    educational and public broadcast stations, we also determined that the 
    exemption does not apply to ITFS, which is a non-broadcast service. 
    Thus, although we agreed with commenters that ITFS is similar to 
    noncommercial educational broadcast service and that Section 309(j) may 
    not reflect on its face Congress's intent regarding the treatment of 
    competing ITFS applications, we found that auctions are statutorily 
    required to resolve all pending and future mutually exclusive ITFS 
    applications. However, we will request that Congress amend Section 
    309(j) so that the statute clearly reflects its intent with regard to 
    ITFS. Absent a clear statement from Congress that it means to exempt 
    ITFS from competitive bidding, we will proceed to auction mutually 
    exclusive ITFS applications. ITFS auctions will not commence 
    immediately, however, in order to allow sufficient time for the 
    Commission to obtain Congressional guidance.
        44. We also determined to use competitive bidding to resolve 
    mutually exclusive major modification applications. Although some 
    commenters opposed the auctioning of modification applications, 
    commenters did not suggest another method of resolving mutually 
    exclusive major modification applications that is as efficient as 
    competitive bidding. We will, however, allow applicants who have filed 
    competing major modification applications, or competing major 
    modification and new station applications, to resolve their mutual 
    exclusivity by means of engineering solutions or settlement before 
    proceeding to auction. We saw less utility to be gained from subjecting 
    minor change applications to competitive bidding procedures; thus, in 
    accord with the comments, the parties will be expected to work together 
    to resolve any mutual exclusivities between minor modification 
    applications.
        45. Section 309(l) governs the resolution of approximately 130 
    pending comparative licensing proceedings involving pre-July 1, 1997, 
    applications for new commercial radio or television stations that did 
    not settle within the 180-day waiver period prescribed by Congress. For 
    settlements executed within that period, we waived our settlement 
    rules, including the prohibition against ``white knight'' settlement 
    agreements where a full-market settlement was involved. Based upon the 
    express language of Section 309(l), we concluded that in cases that did 
    not settle, we have discretion to resolve applications subject to that 
    provision by either auction or comparative hearings. Some commenters 
    favored the use of comparative hearings for these pending pre-July 1, 
    1997 cases and expressed concern that the switch to auctions would 
    detrimentally affect the quality of broadcast service. We found that 
    Congress itself has made the judgment that auctions are generally 
    preferable to comparative hearings, and concluded that, by providing us 
    with the discretion to determine whether or not to use auctions in 
    pending pre-July 1st cases, Congress intended the Commission to focus 
    on any special circumstances in these cases that would tip the policy 
    balance in favor of comparative hearings, not to re-visit the general 
    congressional determination that broadcast auctions serve the public 
    interest.
        46. In exercising this discretion, we concluded that, even for the 
    few pre-July 1, 1997 cases that had already progressed through an 
    Initial Decision by an Administrative Law Judge, auctions will 
    generally be fairer and more expeditious than deciding these pending 
    cases through the comparative hearing process, particularly since the 
    court's invalidation of the key comparative criterion prevents us from 
    deciding any of these cases according to the applicants' reasonable 
    expectation when they filed their applications. We found that for the 
    Commission's Administrative Law Judges to adjudicate and decide the 
    approximately 130 pending proceedings would take many years while 
    auctions can be carried out much more quickly.
        47. We rejected arguments raised by commenters that changing the 
    selection process for pending applications filed before July 1, 1997 is 
    impermissibly retroactive or otherwise unlawful. We found that none of 
    the pre-July 1, 1997 applicants subject to the new Section 309(l) have 
    a vested right to a comparative hearing that is abridged by our 
    decision to resolve such applications by competitive bidding. And, in 
    any event, the economic impact of this regulatory change is ameliorated 
    somewhat by the statutory requirement that auctions to decide these 
    pending cases be closed to other participants.
        48. Based upon the express language of Section 309(l)(2), we found 
    that, where post-June 30, 1997 applications are mutually exclusive with 
    two or more pre-July 1, 1997 applications, we must dismiss them and 
    conduct a competitive bidding procedure that is restricted to the pre-
    July 1, 1997 applications. We rejected arguments by some commenters 
    that the distinction between pre-July 1st and post June 30th 
    applications is arbitrary. We found that Congress adopted a bright line 
    distinction and that this distinction operates to exclude some 
    applicants but to include others does not make it unlawful. Moreover, 
    the practical effect of this bright line distinction will be limited, 
    as we believe that settlement agreements have been filed in connection 
    with the small number of cases involving post-June 30th applications 
    mutually exclusive with two or more pre-July 1st applications.
        49. Except for applications subject to Section 309(l), there is no 
    statutory bar to reopening new filing periods for applications that 
    would be mutually exclusive with pending applications. We agreed with 
    commenters that reopening already closed filing periods would not serve 
    the public interest since it would delay, rather than expedite, the 
    resolution of the pending applications, and would defeat the reasonable 
    expectations of applicants who timely filed long-form applications.
        50. As a matter of fairness to pending applicants, we determined to 
    refund all hearing and certain filing fees paid by all pending 
    applicants. But we declined the suggestion of various commenters
    
    [[Page 48622]]
    
    that we also reimburse the legitimate and prudent expenses of pending 
    pre-July 1st applicants subject to the comparative freeze, who either 
    do not participate in the auction or are outbid in the auction. We are 
    aware of no legal authority to make such additional reimbursement and 
    concluded we have no obligation to do so.
        51. We concluded that, consistent with our approach in most of the 
    Commission's previous auctions, broadcast and ITFS applicants should be 
    required to submit upfront payments with their short-form applications 
    prior to auction. We also reserved the right to adopt minimum opening 
    bid and/or reserve prices for each license. Establishing upfront 
    payments, minimum opening bid and/or reserve prices may have a 
    significant economic impact on small businesses interested in applying 
    for commercial broadcast and ITFS licenses. However, upfront payments 
    have been required in our general part 1 auction rules since they were 
    first promulgated, and Congress has directed us to prescribe minimum 
    opening bids or reserve prices unless we specifically determine that 
    this will not serve the public interest. While we were unpersuaded by 
    generalized assertions that reserve prices or minimum opening bids 
    would contravene the public interest, we directed the staff to seek 
    comment on, and as appropriate, establish upfront payments, opening 
    bids and/or reserve prices for each auction or group auctions.
        52. A number of commenters opposed our proposal to apply the anti-
    collusion rule to broadcast service auctions, believing instead that 
    auction applicants should be permitted to conclude settlement 
    agreements following the short-form filing deadline with those 
    applicants with whom they are mutually exclusive. We noted that we 
    adopted the anti-collusion rule to both prevent and to facilitate the 
    detection of collusive conduct, thereby enhancing the competitiveness 
    of the auction process and the post-auction market structure. We found 
    that the rule has proven effective in the numerous spectrum auctions 
    conducted to date, and concluded to apply the rule to broadcast 
    auctions, although a limited exception to the anti-collusion rule will 
    be made, as discussed above, in the context of mutually exclusive major 
    modification applications.
        53. For the pending comparative renewal proceedings (which may not 
    be resolved by auction), we determined that the most equitable and 
    expeditious approach would be simply to permit the renewal applicants 
    and their challengers, within the confines of the generally phrased 
    standard comparative issues, to present whatever factors and evidence 
    they believe most appropriate.
    
    Report to Congress
    
        54. The Commission will send a copy of the First R&O, including 
    this FRFA, in a report to be sent to Congress pursuant to the Small 
    Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996. 3See 5 U.S.C. 
    801(a)(1)(A). In addition, the Commission will send a copy of the First 
    R&O, including the FRFA, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small 
    Business Administration.
        55. Authority for issuance of this First R&O is contained in 
    Sections 4(i) and (j), 301, 303(f), 303(g), 303(h), 303(j), 303(r), 
    307(c), 308(b), 309(j), 309(l) and 403 of the Communications Act of 
    1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 154(j), 301, 303(f), 303(g), 
    303(h), 303(j), 303(r), 307(c), 308(b), 309(j), 309(l) and 403.
    
    List of Subjects in 47 CFR parts 1, 73 and 74
    
        Radio broadcasting, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, 
    Television broadcasting.
    
    Federal Communications Commission.
    William F. Caton,
    Deputy Secretary.
    
    Rule Changes
    
        Parts 1, 73 and 74 of Chapter 1 of Title 47 of the Code of Federal 
    Regulations are amended as follows:
    
    PART 1--PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE
    
        1. The authority for part 1 continues to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 79 et seq.; 47 U.S.C. 151, 154(i), 154(j), 
    155, 225, and 303(r).
    
        2. Section 1.65 is amended by revising paragraphs (a) and (b) to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.65  Substantial and significant changes in the information 
    furnished by applicants to the Commission.
    
        (a) Each applicant is responsible for the continuing accuracy and 
    completeness of information furnished in a pending application or in 
    Commission proceedings involving a pending application. Whenever the 
    information furnished in the pending application is no longer 
    substantially accurate and complete in all significant respects, the 
    applicant shall as promptly as possible and in any event within 30 
    days, unless good cause is shown, amend or request the amendment of his 
    application so as to furnish such additional or corrected information 
    as may be appropriate. Whenever there has been a substantial change as 
    to any other matter which may be of decisional significance in a 
    Commission proceeding involving the pending application, the applicant 
    shall as promptly as possible and in any event within 30 days, unless 
    good cause is shown, submit a statement furnishing such additional or 
    corrected information as may be appropriate, which shall be served upon 
    parties of record in accordance with Sec. 1.47. Where the matter is 
    before any court for review, statements and requests to amend shall in 
    addition be served upon the Commission's General Counsel. For the 
    purposes of this section, an application is ``pending'' before the 
    Commission from the time it is accepted for filing by the Commission 
    until a Commission grant or denial of the application is no longer 
    subject to reconsideration by the Commission or to review by any court.
        (b) Applications in ITFS and broadcast services subject to 
    competitive bidding will be subject to the provisions of 
    Secs. 1.2105(b), 73.5002 and 73.3522 regarding the modification of 
    their applications.
    * * * * *
        3. Section 1.1601 is amended by reserving paragraph (a) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.1601  Scope.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) [Reserved]
    * * * * *
        4. Section 1.604 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1.1604  Post-selection hearings.
    
        (a) Following the random selection, the Commission shall announce 
    the ``tentative selectee'' and, where permitted by Sec. 73.3584 invite 
    Petitions to Deny its application.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 73--RADIO BROADCAST SERVICES
    
        5. The authority for part 73 is revised to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 303, 334 and 336.
    
        6. Section 73.1010 is amended by adding paragraph (a)(8) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 73.1010  Cross reference to rules in other parts.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) * * *
        (8) Subpart Q, ``Competitive Bidding Proceedings'' (Secs. 1.2101-
    1.2112).
    * * * * *
        7. Section 73.3500 is amended by adding the following new entry in 
    numerical order to read as follows:
    
    [[Page 48623]]
    
    Sec. 73.3500  Application and report forms.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
               Form  number                             Title               
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    175...............................  Application to Participate in an FCC
                                         Auction                            
                                                                            
                    *         *         *         *         *               
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        8. Section 73.3522 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 73.3522  Amendment of applications.
    
        (a) Broadcast services subject to competitive bidding. (1) 
    Applicants in all broadcast services subject to competitive bidding 
    will be subject to the provisions of Secs. 73.5002 and 1.2105(b) 
    regarding the modification of their short-form applications.
        (2) Subject to the provision of Sec. 73.5005, if it is determined 
    that a long form application submitted by a winning bidder or a non-
    mutually exclusive applicant for a new station or a major change in an 
    existing station in all broadcast services subject to competitive 
    bidding is substantially complete, but contains any defect, omission, 
    or inconsistency, a deficiency letter will be issued affording the 
    applicant an opportunity to correct the defect, omission or 
    inconsistency. Amendments may be filed pursuant to the deficiency 
    letter curing any defect, omission or inconsistency identified by the 
    Commission, or to make minor modifications to the application, or 
    pursuant to Sec. 1.65. Such amendments should be filed in accordance 
    with Sec. 73.3513. If a petition to deny has been filed, the amendment 
    shall be served on the petitioner.
        (3) Subject to the provisions of Secs. 73.3571, 73.3572 and 
    73.3573, deficiencies, omissions or inconsistencies in long-form 
    applications may not be cured by major amendment. The filing of major 
    amendments to long-form applications is not permitted. An application 
    will be considered to be newly filed if it is amended by a major 
    amendment.
        (4) Paragraph (a) of this section is not applicable to applications 
    for minor modifications of facilities in the non-reserved FM broadcast 
    service, nor to any application for a reserved band FM station.
        (b) Reserved band FM and reserved noncommercial educational 
    television stations.--(1) Predesignation amendments. Subject to the 
    provisions of Secs. 73.3525, 73.3572, 73.3573 and 73.3580, mutually 
    exclusive broadcast applications for reserved band FM stations and 
    television stations on a reserved channel may be amended as a matter of 
    right by the date specified (not less than 30 days after issuance) in 
    the FCC's Public Notice announcing the acceptance for filing of the 
    last-filed mutually exclusive application. Subsequent amendments prior 
    to designation of the proceeding for hearing will be considered only 
    upon a showing of good cause for late filing or pursuant to Sec. 1.65 
    or Sec. 73.3514. Unauthorized or untimely amendments are subject to 
    return by the FCC's staff without consideration.
        (2) Postdesignation amendments. (i) Except as provided in paragraph 
    (ii) of this section, requests to amend an application after it has 
    been designated for hearing will be considered only upon written 
    petition properly served upon the parties of record in accordance with 
    Sec. 1.47 and, where applicable, compliance with the provisions of 
    Sec. 73.3525, and will be considered only upon a showing of good cause 
    for late filing. In the case of requests to amend the engineering 
    proposal (other than to make changes with respect to the type of 
    equipment specified), good cause will be considered to have been shown 
    only if, in addition to the usual good cause consideration, it is 
    demonstrated:
        (A) That the amendment is necessitated by events which the 
    applicant could not reasonably have foreseen (e.g., notification of a 
    new foreign station or loss of transmitter site by condemnation); and
        (B) That the amendment does not require an enlargement of issues or 
    the addition of new parties to the proceeding.
        (ii) In comparative broadcast cases (including comparative renewal 
    proceedings), amendments relating to issues first raised in the 
    designation order may be filed as a matter of right within 30 days 
    after that Order or a summary thereof is published in the Federal 
    Register, or by a date certain to be specified in the Order.
        (iii) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (b)(2)(i) and 
    (b)(2)(ii) of this section, and subject to compliance with the 
    provisions of Sec. 73.3525, a petition for leave to amend may be 
    granted, provided it is requested that the application as amended be 
    removed from the hearing docket and returned to the processing line. 
    (c) Minor modifications of facilities in the non-reserved FM broadcast 
    service.
        (1) Subject to the provisions of Secs. 73.3525, 73.3573, and 
    73.3580, for a period of 30 days following the FCC's issuance of a 
    Public Notice announcing the tender of an application for minor 
    modification of a non-reserved band FM station, (other than Class D 
    stations), minor amendments may be filed as a matter of right.
        (2) For applications received on or after August 7, 1992, an 
    applicant whose application is found to meet minimum filing 
    requirements, but nevertheless is not complete and acceptable, shall 
    have the opportunity during the period specified in the FCC staff's 
    deficiency letter to correct all deficiencies in the tenderability and 
    acceptability of the underlying application, including any deficiency 
    not specifically identified by the staff. [For minimum filing 
    requirements see Sec. 73.3564(a). Examples of tender defects appear at 
    50 FR 19936 at 19945-46 (May 13, 1985), reprinted as Appendix D, Report 
    and Order, MM Docket No. 91-347, 7 FCC Rcd 5074, 5083-88 (1992). For 
    examples of acceptance defects, see 49 FR 47331.] Prior to the end of 
    the period specified in the deficiency letter, a submission seeking to 
    correct a tender and/or acceptance defect in an application meeting 
    minimum filing requirements will be treated as an amendment for good 
    cause if it would successfully and directly correct the defect. Other 
    amendments submitted prior to grant will be considered only upon a 
    showing of good cause for late filing or pursuant to Sec. 1.65 or 
    Sec. 73.3514.
        (3) Unauthorized or untimely amendments are subject to return by 
    the Commission without consideration. However, an amendment to a non-
    reserved band application will not be accepted if the effect of such 
    amendment is to alter the proposed facility's coverage area so as to 
    produce a conflict with an applicant who files subsequent to the 
    initial applicant but prior to the amendment application. Similarly, an 
    applicant subject to ``first come/first serve'' processing will not be 
    permitted to amend its application and retain filing priority if the 
    result of such amendment is to alter the facility's coverage area so as 
    to produce a conflict with an applicant which files subsequent to the 
    initial applicant but prior to the amendment.
    
        Note 1 to Sec. 73.3522: When two or more broadcast applications 
    are tendered for filing which are mutually exclusive with each other 
    but not in conflict with any previously filed applications which 
    have been accepted for filing, the FCC, where appropriate, will 
    announce acceptance of the earliest tendered application and place 
    the later filed application or applications on a subsequent public 
    notice of acceptance for filing in order to establish a deadline for 
    the filing of amendments as a matter of right for all applicants in 
    the group.
    
        9. Section 73.3525 is amended by revising paragraphs (c) and (d) 
    and adding paragraph (l) to read as follows:
    
    [[Page 48624]]
    
    Sec. 73.3525  Agreements for removing application conflicts.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Except where a joint request is filed pursuant to paragraph (a) 
    of this section, any applicant filing an amendment pursuant to 
    Secs. 73.3522(b)(1) and (c), or a request for dismissal pursuant to 
    Secs. 73.3568(b)(1) and (c), which would remove a conflict with another 
    pending application; or a petition for leave to amend pursuant to 
    Sec. 73.3522(b)(2) which would permit a grant of the amended 
    application or an application previously in conflict with the amended 
    application; or a request for dismissal pursuant to Sec. 73.3568(b)(2), 
    shall file with it an affidavit as to whether or not consideration 
    (including an agreement for merger of interests) has been promised to 
    or received by such applicant, directly or indirectly, in connection 
    with the amendment, petition or request.
        (d) Upon the filing of a petition for leave to amend or to dismiss 
    an application for broadcast facilities which has been designated for 
    hearing or upon the dismissal of such application on the FCC's own 
    motion pursuant to Sec. 73.3568, each applicant or party remaining in 
    hearing, as to whom a conflict would be removed by the amendment or 
    dismissal shall submit for inclusion in the record of that proceeding 
    an affidavit stating whether or not he has directly or indirectly paid 
    or promised consideration (including an agreement for merger of 
    interests) in connection with the removal of such conflict.
    * * * * *
        (l) The prohibition of collusion as set forth in Secs. 1.2105(c) 
    and 73.5002 of this section, which becomes effective upon the filing of 
    short-form applications, shall apply to all broadcast services subject 
    to competitive bidding.
        10. Section 73.3564 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 73.3564  Acceptance of applications.
    
        (a)(1) Applications tendered for filing are dated upon receipt and 
    then forwarded to the Mass Media Bureau, where an administrative 
    examination is made to ascertain whether the applications are complete. 
    Except for applications for minor modifications of facilities in the 
    non-reserved FM band, as defined in Sec. 73.3573(a)(2), long form 
    applications subject to the provisions of Sec. 73.5005 found to be 
    complete or substantially complete are accepted for filing and are 
    given file numbers. In the case of minor defects as to completeness, a 
    deficiency letter will be issued and the applicant will be required to 
    supply the missing or corrective information. Applications that are not 
    substantially complete will not be considered and will be returned to 
    the applicant.
        (2) In the case of minor modifications of facilities in the non-
    reserved FM band, applications will be placed on public notice if they 
    meet the following two-tiered minimum filing requirement as initially 
    filed in first come/first served proceedings:
        (i) The application must include:
        (A) Applicant's name and address,
        (B) Applicant's original signature,
        (C) Principal community,
        (D) Channel or frequency,
        (E) Class of station, and
        (F) Transmitter site coordinates; and
        (ii) The application must not omit more than 3 of the second tier 
    items specified in appendix C, Report and Order, MM Docket No. 91-347, 
    FCC 92-328, 7 FCC Rcd 5074 (1992). Applications found not to meet 
    minimum filing requirements will be returned to the applicant. 
    Applications found to meet minimum filing requirements, but that 
    contain deficiencies in tender and/or acceptance information, shall be 
    given an opportunity for corrective amendment pursuant to Sec. 73.3522. 
    Applications found to be substantially complete and in accordance with 
    the Commission's core legal and technical requirements will be accepted 
    for filing. Applications with uncorrected tender and/or acceptance 
    defects remaining after the opportunity for corrective amendment will 
    be dismissed with no further opportunity for corrective amendment.
        (b) Acceptance of an application for filing merely means that it 
    has been the subject of a preliminary review by the FCC's 
    administrative staff as to completeness. Such acceptance will not 
    preclude the subsequent dismissal of the application if it is found to 
    be patently not in accordance with the FCC's rules.
        (c) At regular intervals, the FCC will issue a Public Notice 
    listing all long form applications which have been accepted for filing. 
    Pursuant to Secs. 73.3571(h), 73.3572, and 73.3573(f), such notice 
    shall establish a cut-off date for the filing of petitions to deny. 
    With respect to reserved band FM applications, the Public Notice shall 
    also establish a cut-off date for the filing of mutually exclusive 
    applications pursuant to Sec. 73.3573(e). However, no application will 
    be accepted for filing unless certification of compliance with the 
    local notice requirements of Sec. 73.3580(h) has been made in the 
    tendered application.
        (d) The FCC will specify by Public Notice, pursuant to 
    Sec. 73.5002, a period for filing applications for new stations or for 
    major modifications in the facilities of an existing station. Except 
    for reserved band FM stations and TV stations on reserved noncommercial 
    educational channels, applications for new and major modifications in 
    facilities will be accepted only during these window filing periods 
    specified by the Commission.
        (e) Applications for minor modification of facilities may be 
    tendered at any time, unless restricted by the FCC. These applications 
    will be processed on a ``first come/first served'' basis and will be 
    treated as simultaneously tendered if filed on the same day. Any 
    applications received after the filing of a lead application will be 
    grouped according to filing date, and placed in a queue behind the lead 
    applicant. The FCC will periodically release a Public Notice listing 
    those minor modification of facilities applications accepted for 
    filing.
        (f) If a non-reserved band FM channel allotment becomes vacant, 
    after the grant of a construction permit becomes final, because of a 
    lapsed construction permit or for any other reason, the FCC will, by 
    Public Notice, announce a subsequent filing window for the acceptance 
    of new applications for such channels.
        (g) Applications for operation in the 1605-1705 kHz band will be 
    accepted only if filed pursuant to the terms of Sec. 73.30(b).
        11. Section 73.3568 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 73.3568  Dismissal of applications.
    
        (a) (1) Failure to prosecute an application, or failure to respond 
    to official correspondence or request for additional information, will 
    be cause for dismissal.
        (2) Applicants in all broadcast services subject to competitive 
    bidding will be subject to the provisions of Secs. 73.5002 and 
    1.2105(b) regarding the dismissal of their short-form applications.
        (3) Applicants in all broadcast services subject to competitive 
    bidding will be subject to the provisions of Secs. 73.5004, 73.5005 and 
    1.2104(g) regarding the dismissal of their long-form applications and 
    the imposition of applicable withdrawal, default and disqualification 
    payments.
        (b) (1) Subject to the provisions of Sec. 73.3525, dismissal of 
    applications for channels reserved for noncommercial educational use 
    will be without prejudice where an application has not yet been 
    designated for hearing, but may
    
    [[Page 48625]]
    
    be made with prejudice after designation for hearing.
        (2) Subject to the provisions of Sec. 73.3525, requests to dismiss 
    an application for a channel reserved for noncommercial educational 
    use, without prejudice, after it has been designated for hearing, will 
    be considered only upon written petition properly served upon all 
    parties of record. Such requests shall be granted only upon a showing 
    that the request is based on circumstances wholly beyond the 
    applicant's control which preclude further prosecution of his 
    application.
        (c) Subject to the provisions of Secs. 73.3523 and 73.3525, any 
    application for minor modification of facilities may, upon request of 
    the applicant, be dismissed without prejudice as a matter of right.
        (d) An applicant's request for the return of an application that 
    has been accepted for filing will be regarded as a request for 
    dismissal.
        12. Section 73.3571 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 73.3571  Processing of AM broadcast station applications.
    
        (a) Applications for AM broadcast facilities are divided into three 
    groups.
        (1) In the first group are applications for new stations or for 
    major changes in the facilities of authorized stations. A major change 
    for an AM station authorized under this part is any increase in power, 
    except where accompanied by a complimentary reduction of antenna 
    efficiency which leads to the same amount, or less, radiation in all 
    directions (in the horizontal and vertical planes when skywave 
    propagation is involved, and in the horizontal plane only for daytime 
    considerations), relative to the presently authorized radiation levels, 
    or any change in frequency, hours of operation, or community of 
    license. A major change in ownership is a situation where the original 
    party or parties to the application do not retain more than 50% 
    ownership interest in the application as originally filed.
        (2) The second group consists of applications for licenses and all 
    other changes in the facilities of authorized stations.
        (3) The third group consists of applications for operation in the 
    1605-1705 kHz band which are filed subsequent to FCC notification that 
    allotments have been awarded to petitioners under the procedure 
    specified in Sec. 73.30.
        (b)(1) The FCC may, after acceptance of an application for 
    modification of facilities, advise the applicant that such application 
    is considered to be one for a major change and therefore is subject to 
    the provisions of Secs. 73.3522, 73.3580 and 1.1111 of this chapter 
    pertaining to major changes. Such major modification applications will 
    be dismissed as set forth in paragraph (h)(1)(i) of this section.
        (2) An amendment to an application which would effect a major 
    change, as defined in paragraph (a)(1) of this section, will not be 
    accepted except as provided for in paragraph (h)(1)(i) of this section.
        (c) An application for changes in the facilities of an existing 
    station will continue to carry the same file number even though 
    (pursuant to FCC approval) an assignment of license or transfer of 
    control of said licensee or permittee has taken place if, upon 
    consummation, the application is amended to reflect the new ownership.
        (d) If, upon examination, the FCC finds that the public interest, 
    convenience and necessity will be served by the granting of an 
    application, the same will be granted. If the FCC is unable to make 
    such a finding and it appears that a hearing may be required, the 
    procedure set forth in Sec. 73.3593 will be followed.
        (e) Applications proposing to increase the power of an AM station 
    are subject to the following requirements:
        (1) In order to be acceptable for filing, any application which 
    does not involve a change in site must propose at least a 20% increase 
    in the station's nominal power.
        (2) Applications involving a change in site are not subject to the 
    requirements in paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
        (3) Applications for nighttime power increases for Class D stations 
    are not subject to the requirements of this section and will be 
    processed as minor changes.
        (4) The following special procedures will be followed in 
    authorizing Class II-D daytime-only stations on 940 and 1550 kHz, and 
    Class III daytime-only stations on the 41 regional channels listed in 
    Sec. 73.26(a), to operate unlimited-time.
        (i) Each eligible daytime-only station in the foregoing categories 
    will receive an Order to Show Cause why its license should not be 
    modified to specify operation during nighttime hours with the 
    facilities it is licensed to start using at local sunrise, using the 
    power stated in the Order to Show Cause, that the Commission finds is 
    the highest nighttime level--not exceeding 0.5 kW--at which the station 
    could operate without causing prohibited interference to other domestic 
    or foreign stations, or to co-channel or adjacent channel stations for 
    which pending applications were filed before December 1, 1987.
        (ii) Stations accepting such modification shall be reclassified. 
    Those authorized in such Show Cause Orders to operate during nighttime 
    hours with a power of 0.25 kW or more, or with a power that, although 
    less than 0.25 kW, is sufficient to enable them to attain RMS field 
    strengths of 141 mV/m or more at 1 kilometer, shall be redesignated as 
    Class II-B stations if they are assigned to 940 or 1550 kHz, and as 
    unlimited-time Class III stations if they are assigned to regional 
    channels.
        (iii) Stations accepting such modification that are authorized to 
    operate during nighttime hours at powers less than 0.25 kW, and that 
    cannot with such powers attain RMS field strengths of 141 mV/m or more 
    at 1 kilometer, shall be redesignated as Class II-S stations if they 
    are assigned to 940 or 1550 kHz, and as Class III-S stations if they 
    are assigned to regional channels.
        (iv) Applications for new stations may be filed at any time on 940 
    and 1550 kHz and on the regional channels. Also, stations assigned to 
    940 or 1550 kHz, or to the regional channels, may at any time, 
    regardless of their classifications, apply for power increases up to 
    the maximum generally permitted. Such applications for new or changed 
    facilities will be granted without taking into account interference 
    caused to Class II-S or Class III-S stations, but will be required to 
    show interference protection to other classes of stations, including 
    stations that were previously classified as Class II-S or Class III-S, 
    but were later reclassified as Class II-B or Class III unlimited-time 
    stations as a result of subsequent facilities modifications that 
    permitted power increases qualifying them to discontinue their ``S'' 
    subclassification.
        (f) Applications for minor modifications for AM broadcast stations, 
    as defined in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, may be filed at any 
    time, unless restricted by the FCC, and, generally will be processed in 
    the order in which they are tendered. The FCC will periodically release 
    a Public Notice listing those applications accepted for filing. Any 
    such applications found to be mutually exclusive must be resolved 
    through settlement or technical amendment.
        (g) Applications for change of license to change hours of operation 
    of a Class C AM broadcast station, to decrease hours of operation of 
    any other class of station, or to change station location involving no 
    change in transmitter site will be considered without reference to the 
    processing line.
    
    [[Page 48626]]
    
        (h) Processing new and major AM broadcast station applications. 
    (1)(i) The FCC will specify by Public Notice, pursuant to Sec. 73.5002, 
    a period for filing AM applications for a new station or for major 
    modifications in the facilities of an authorized station. AM 
    applications for new facilities or for major modifications will be 
    accepted only during these specified periods. Applications submitted 
    prior to the appropriate filing period or ``window'' opening date 
    identified in the Public Notice will be returned as premature. 
    Applications submitted after the specified deadline will be dismissed 
    with prejudice as untimely.
        (ii) Such AM applicants will be subject to the provisions of 
    Secs. 1.2105 and 73.5002 regarding the submission of the short-form 
    application, FCC Form 175, and all appropriate certifications, 
    information and exhibits contained therein. To determine which AM 
    applications are mutually exclusive, AM applicants must submit the 
    engineering data contained in FCC Form 301 as a supplement to the 
    short-form application. Such engineering data will not be studied for 
    technical acceptability, but will be protected from subsequently filed 
    applications as of the close of the window filing period. 
    Determinations as to the acceptability or grantability of an 
    applicant's proposal will not be made prior to an auction.
        (iii) AM applicants will be subject to the provisions of 
    Secs. 1.2105 and 73.5002 regarding the modification and dismissal of 
    their short-form applications.
        (2) Subsequently, the FCC will release Public Notices:
        (i) identifying the short-form applications received during the 
    window filing period which are found to be mutually exclusive;
        (ii) establishing a date, time and place for an auction;
        (iii) providing information regarding the methodology of 
    competitive bidding to be used in the upcoming auction, bid submission 
    and payment procedures, upfront payment procedures, upfront payment 
    deadlines, minimum opening bid requirements and applicable reserve 
    prices in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 73.5002;
        (iv) identifying applicants who have submitted timely upfront 
    payments and, thus, are qualified to bid in the auction.
        (3) If, during the window filing period, the FCC receives non-
    mutually exclusive AM applications, a Public Notice will be released 
    identifying the non-mutually exclusive applicants, who will be required 
    to submit the appropriate long form application within 30 days of the 
    Public Notice and pursuant to the provisions of Sec. 73.5005(d). These 
    non-mutually exclusive applications will be processed and the FCC will 
    periodically release a Public Notice listing such non-mutually 
    exclusive applications determined to be acceptable for filing and 
    announcing a date by which petitions to deny must be filed in 
    accordance with the provisions of Secs. 73.5006 and 73.3584. If the 
    applicant is duly qualified, and upon examination, the FCC finds that 
    the public interest, convenience and necessity will be served by the 
    granting of the non-mutually exclusive long form application, the same 
    will be granted.
        (4)(i) The auction will be held pursuant to the procedures set 
    forth in Secs. 1.2101 et seq. and 73.5000 et seq. Subsequent to the 
    auction, the FCC will release a Public Notice announcing the close of 
    the auction and identifying the winning bidders. Winning bidders will 
    be subject to the provisions of Secs. 1.2107 and 73.5003 regarding down 
    payments and will be required to submit the appropriate down payment 
    within 10 business days of the Public Notice. Pursuant to Secs. 1.2107 
    and 73.5005, a winning bidder that meets its down payment obligations 
    in a timely manner must, within 30 days of the release of the Public 
    Notice announcing the close of the auction, submit the appropriate 
    long-form application for each construction permit for which it was the 
    winning bidder. Long-form applications filed by winning bidders shall 
    include the exhibits identified in Sec. 73.5005(a).
        (ii) These applications will be processed and the FCC will 
    periodically release a Public Notice listing such applications that 
    have been accepted for filing and announcing a date by which petitions 
    to deny must be filed in accordance with the provisions of 
    Secs. 73.5006 and 73.3584. If the applicant is duly qualified, and upon 
    examination, the FCC finds that the public interest, convenience and 
    necessity will be served by the granting of the winning bidder's long-
    form application, a Public Notice will be issued announcing that the 
    construction permit is ready to be granted. Each winning bidder shall 
    pay the balance of its winning bid in a lump sum within 10 business 
    days after release of the Public Notice, as set forth in 
    Secs. 1.2109(a) and 73.5003. Construction permits will be granted by 
    the Commission following the receipt of the full payment.
        (iii) All long-form applications will be cutoff as of the date of 
    filing with the FCC and will be protected from subsequently filed long-
    form applications. Applications will be required to protect all 
    previously filed commercial and noncommercial applications. Winning 
    bidders filing long-form applications may change the technical 
    proposals specified in their previously submitted short-form 
    applications, but such change may not constitute a major change. If the 
    submitted long-form application would constitute a major change from 
    the proposal submitted in the short-form application, the long-form 
    application will be returned pursuant to paragraph (h)(1)(i) of this 
    section.
        (i) In order to grant a major or minor change application made 
    contingent upon the grant of another licensee's request for a facility 
    modification, the Commission will not consider mutually exclusive 
    applications by other parties that would not protect the currently 
    authorized facilities of the contingent applicants. Such major change 
    applications remain, however, subject to the provisions of 
    Secs. 73.3580 and 1.1111. The Commission shall grant contingent 
    requests for construction permits for station modifications only upon a 
    finding that such action will promote the public interest, convenience 
    and necessity.
        13. Section 73.3572 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 73.3572  Processing of TV broadcast, low power TV, TV translator 
    and TV booster station applications.
    
        (a) Applications for TV stations are divided into two groups:
        (1) In the first group are applications for new stations or major 
    changes in the facilities of authorized stations. A major change for TV 
    broadcast stations authorized under this part is any change in 
    frequency or community of license which is in accord with a present 
    allotment contained in the Table of Allotments (Sec. 73.606). Other 
    requests for change in frequency or community of license for TV 
    broadcast stations must first be submitted in the form of a petition 
    for rulemaking to amend the Table of Allotments. In the case of low 
    power TV, TV translator, and TV booster stations authorized under part 
    74 of this chapter, a major change is any change in:
        (i) Frequency (output channel) assignment (does not apply to TV 
    boosters);
        (ii) Transmitting antenna system including the direction of the 
    radiation, directive antenna pattern or transmission line;
        (iii) Antenna height;
        (iv) Antenna location exceeding 200 meters; or
        (v) Authorized operating power.
        (2) However, if the proposed modification of facilities, other than 
    a
    
    [[Page 48627]]
    
    change in frequency, will not increase the signal range of the low 
    power TV, TV translator or TV booster station in any horizontal 
    direction, the modification will not be considered a major change.
        (i) Provided that in the case of an authorized low power TV, TV 
    translator or TV booster which is predicted to cause or receive 
    interference to or from an authorized TV broadcast station pursuant to 
    Sec. 74.705 or interference with broadcast or other services under 
    Sec. 74.703 or Sec. 74.709, that an application for a change in output 
    channel, together with technical modifications which are necessary to 
    avoid interference (including a change in antenna location of less than 
    16.1 km), will not be considered as an application for a major change 
    in those facilities.
        (ii) Provided further, that a low power TV, TV translator or TV 
    booster station: authorized on a channel from channel 60 to 69, or 
    which is causing or receiving interference or is predicted to cause or 
    receive interference to or from an authorized DTV station pursuant to 
    Sec. 74.706, or which is located within the distances specified below 
    in paragraph (iii) of this section to the coordinates of co-channel DTV 
    authorizations (or allotment table coordinates if there are no 
    authorized facilities at different coordinates), may at any time file a 
    displacement relief application for a change in output channel, 
    together with any technical modifications which are necessary to avoid 
    interference or continue serving the station's protected service area. 
    Such an application will not be considered as an application for a 
    major change in those facilities. Where such an application is mutually 
    exclusive with applications for new low power TV, TV translator or TV 
    booster stations, or with other nondisplacement relief applications for 
    facilities modifications, priority will be afforded to the displacement 
    application(s) to the exclusion of the other applications.
        (iii)(A) The geographic separations to co-channel DTV facilities or 
    allotment reference coordinates, as applicable, within which to qualify 
    for displacement relief are the following:
        (1) Stations on UHF channels: 265 km (162 miles)
        (2) Stations on VHF channels 2-6: 280 km (171 miles)
        (3) Stations on VHF channels 7-13: 260 km (159 miles)
        (B) Engineering showings of predicted interference may also be 
    submitted to justify the need for displacement relief.
        (iv) Provided further, that the FCC may, within 15 days after 
    acceptance of any other application for modification of facilities, 
    advise the applicant that such application is considered to be one for 
    a major change and therefore subject to the provisions of 
    Secs. 73.3522, 73.3580, and 1.1111 of this chapter pertaining to major 
    changes. Such major modification applications filed for low power TV, 
    TV translator, TV booster stations, and for a non-reserved television 
    allotment, are subject to competitive bidding procedures and will be 
    dismissed if filed outside a specified filing period. See 47 CFR 
    73.5002(a).
        (b) A new file number will be assigned to an application for a new 
    station or for major changes in the facilities of an authorized 
    station, when it is amended so as to effect a major change, as defined 
    in paragraph (a)(1) of this section, or result in a situation where the 
    original party or parties to the application do not retain more than 
    50% ownership interest in the application as originally filed and 
    Sec. 73.3580 will apply to such amended application. An application for 
    change in the facilities of any existing station will continue to carry 
    the same file number even though (pursuant to FCC approval) an 
    assignment of license or transfer of control of such licensee or 
    permittee has taken place if, upon consummation, the application is 
    amended to reflect the new ownership.
        (c) Amendments to low power TV, TV translator, TV booster stations, 
    or non-reserved television applications, which would require a new file 
    number pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section, are subject to 
    competitive bidding procedures and will be dismissed if filed outside a 
    specified filing period. See 47 CFR 73.5002(a). When an amendment to an 
    application for a reserved television allotment would require a new 
    file number pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section, the applicant 
    will have the opportunity to withdraw the amendment at any time prior 
    to designation for a hearing if applicable; and may be afforded, 
    subject to the discretion of the Administrative Law Judge, an 
    opportunity to withdraw the amendment after designation for a hearing.
        (d) Applications for TV stations on reserved noncommercial 
    educational channels will be processed as nearly as possible in the 
    order in which they are filed. Such applications will be placed in the 
    processing line in numerical sequence, and will be drawn by the staff 
    for study, the lowest file number first. In order that those 
    applications which are entitled to be grouped for processing may be 
    fixed prior to the time processing of the earliest filed application is 
    begun, the FCC will periodically release a Public Notice listing 
    applications which have been accepted for filing and announcing a date 
    (not less than 30 days after issuance) on which the listed applications 
    will be considered available and ready for processing and by which all 
    mutually exclusive applications and petitions to deny the listed 
    applications must be filed.
        (e)(1) The FCC will specify by Public Notice, pursuant to 
    Sec. 73.5002, a period for filing applications for a new non-reserved 
    television, low power TV and TV translator stations or for major 
    modifications in the facilities of such authorized station.
        (2) Such applicants shall be subject to the provisions of 
    Secs. 1.2105 and competitive bidding procedures. See 47 CFR 73.5000 et 
    seq.
        (f) Applications for minor modifications for television broadcast, 
    low power television and TV translator stations, as defined in 
    paragraph (a)(2) of this section, may be filed at any time, unless 
    restricted by the FCC, and, generally, will be processed in the order 
    in which they are tendered.
        (g) TV booster station applications may be filed at any time. 
    Subsequent to filing, the FCC will release a Public Notice accepting 
    for filing and proposing for grant those applications which are not 
    mutually exclusive with any other TV translator, low power TV, or TV 
    booster application, and providing for the filing of Petitions To Deny 
    pursuant to Sec. 73.3584.
        14. Section 73.3573 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 73.3573  Processing FM broadcast station applications.
    
        (a) Applications for FM broadcast stations are divided into two 
    groups:
        (1) In the first group are applications for new stations or for 
    major changes in the facilities of authorized stations. A major change 
    for an FM station authorized under this part is any change in frequency 
    or community of license which is in accord with a present allotment 
    contained in the Table of Allotments (Sec. 73.202(b)). A licensee or 
    permittee may seek the higher or lower class adjacent channel, 
    intermediate frequency or co-channel or the same class adjacent channel 
    of its existing FM broadcast station authorization by filing a minor 
    change application. Other requests for change in frequency or community 
    of license for FM stations must first be submitted in the form of a 
    petition for rulemaking to amend the Table of Allotments. Long-form 
    applications submitted pursuant to Sec. 73.5005 for a new FM broadcast 
    service may propose a higher or lower class adjacent channel, 
    intermediate frequency or co-channel. For
    
    [[Page 48628]]
    
    noncommercial educational FM stations, a major change is any change in 
    frequency or community of license or any change in power or antenna 
    location or height above average terrain (or combination thereof) which 
    would result in a change of 50% or more in the area within the 
    station's predicted 1 mV/m field strength contour. (A change in area is 
    defined as the sum of the area gained and the area lost as a percentage 
    of the original area.) A major change in ownership is a situation where 
    the original party or parties to the application do not retain more 
    than 50% ownership interest in the application as originally filed.
        (2) The second group consists of applications for licenses and all 
    other changes in the facilities of authorized stations.
        (b)(1) The FCC may, after the acceptance of an application for 
    modification of facilities, advise the applicant that such application 
    is considered to be one for a major change and therefore subject to the 
    provisions of Secs. 73.3522, 73.3580 and 1.1111 of this chapter 
    pertaining to major changes. Such major modification applications in 
    the non-reserved band will be dismissed as set forth in paragraph 
    (f)(2)(i) of this section.
        (2) An amendment to a non-reserved band application which would 
    effect a major change, as defined in paragraph (a)(1) of this section, 
    will not be accepted, except as provided for in paragraph (f)(2)(i) of 
    this section.
        (3) A new file number will be assigned to a reserved band 
    application for a new station or for major changes in the facilities of 
    an authorized station, when it is amended so as to effect a major 
    change, as defined in paragraph (a)(1) of this section. Where an 
    amendment to a reserved band application would require a new file 
    number, the applicant will have the opportunity to withdraw the 
    amendment at any time prior to designation for hearing, if applicable; 
    and may be afforded, subject to the discretion of the Administrative 
    Law Judge, an opportunity to withdraw the amendment after designation 
    for hearing.
        (c) An application for changes in the facilities of any existing 
    station will continue to carry the same file number even though 
    (pursuant to FCC approval) an assignment of license or transfer of 
    control of such licensee or permittee has taken place if, upon 
    consummation, the application is amended to reflect the new ownership.
        (d) If, upon examination, the FCC finds that the public interest, 
    convenience and necessity will be served by the granting of an 
    application for FM broadcast facilities, the same will be granted. If 
    the FCC is unable to make such a finding and it appears that a hearing 
    may be required, the procedure given in Sec. 73.3593 will be followed.
        (e) Applications for reserved band and Class D FM broadcast 
    stations will be processed as nearly as possible in the order in which 
    they are filed. Such applications will be placed in the processing line 
    in numerical sequence, and will be drawn by the staff for study, the 
    lowest file number first. In order that those applications which are 
    entitled to be grouped for processing may be fixed prior to the time 
    processing of the earliest filed application is begun, the FCC will 
    periodically release a Public Notice listing applications which have 
    been accepted for filing and announcing a date (not less than 30 days 
    after publication) on which the listed applications will be considered 
    available and ready for processing and by which all mutually exclusive 
    applications and/or petitions to deny the listed applications must be 
    filed.
        (f) Processing non-reserved FM broadcast station applications. (1) 
    Applications for minor modifications for non-reserved FM broadcast 
    stations, as defined in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, may be filed 
    at any time, unless restricted by the FCC, and, generally, will be 
    processed in the order in which they are tendered. The FCC will 
    periodically release a Public Notice listing those applications 
    accepted for filing. Processing of these applications will be on a 
    ``first come/first serve'' basis with the first acceptable application 
    cutting off the filing rights of subsequent applicants. All 
    applications received on the same day will be treated as simultaneously 
    tendered and, if they are found to be mutually exclusive, must be 
    resolved through settlement or technical amendment. Applications 
    received after the tender of a lead application will be grouped, 
    according to filing date, behind the lead application in a queue. The 
    priority rights of the lead applicant, as against all other applicants, 
    are determined by the date of filing, but the filing date for 
    subsequent applicants for that channel and community only reserves a 
    place in the queue. The rights of an applicant in a queue ripen only 
    upon a final determination that the lead applicant is unacceptable and 
    if the queue member is reached and found acceptable. The queue will 
    remain behind the lead applicant until a construction permit is finally 
    granted, at which time the queue dissolves.
        (2) (i) The FCC will specify by Public Notice, pursuant to 
    Sec. 73.5002(a), a period for filing non-reserved band FM applications 
    for a new station or for major modifications in the facilities of an 
    authorized station. FM applications for new facilities or for major 
    modifications will be accepted only during the appropriate filing 
    period or ``window.'' Applications submitted prior to the window 
    opening date identified in the Public Notice will be returned as 
    premature. Applications submitted after the specified deadline will be 
    dismissed with prejudice as untimely.
        (ii) Such FM applicants will be subject to the provisions of 
    Secs. 1.2105 and 73.5002 regarding the submission of the short-form 
    application, FCC Form 175, and all appropriate certifications, 
    information and exhibits contained therein. FM applicants may submit a 
    set of preferred site coordinates as a supplement to the short-form 
    application. Any specific site indicated by FM applicants will not be 
    studied for technical acceptability, but will be protected from 
    subsequently filed applications as a full-class facility as of the 
    close of the window filing period. Determinations as to the 
    acceptability or grantability of an applicant's proposal will not be 
    made prior to an auction.
        (iii) FM applicants will be subject to the provisions of 
    Secs. 1.2105 and 73.5002(c) regarding the modification and dismissal of 
    their short-form applications.
        (3) Subsequently, the FCC will release Public Notices:
        (i) identifying the short-form applications received during the 
    window filing period which are found to be mutually exclusive;
        (ii) establishing a date, time and place for an auction;
        (iii) providing information regarding the methodology of 
    competitive bidding to be used in the upcoming auction, bid submission 
    and payment procedures, upfront payment procedures, upfront payment 
    deadlines, minimum opening bid requirements and applicable reserve 
    prices in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 73.5002;
        (iv) identifying applicants who have submitted timely upfront 
    payments and, thus, are qualified to bid in the auction.
        (4) If, after the close of the appropriate window filing period, a 
    non-reserved FM allotment remains vacant, the window remains closed 
    until the FCC, by Public Notice, specifies a subsequent period for 
    filing non-reserved band FM applications for a new station or for major 
    modifications in the facilities of an authorized station pursuant to 
    paragraph (f)(2)(i) of this section. If,
    
    [[Page 48629]]
    
    during the window filing period, the FCC receives only one application 
    for any non-reserved FM allotment, a Public Notice will be released 
    identifying the non-mutually exclusive applicant, who will be required 
    to submit the appropriate long-form application within 30 days of the 
    Public Notice and pursuant to the provisions of Sec. 73.5005. These 
    non-mutually exclusive applications will be processed and the FCC will 
    periodically release a Public Notice listing such non-mutually 
    exclusive applications determined to be acceptable for filing and 
    announcing a date by which petitions to deny must be filed in 
    accordance with the provisions of Secs. 73.5006 and 73.3584 of this 
    chapter. If the applicant is duly qualified, and upon examination, the 
    FCC finds that the public interest, convenience and necessity will be 
    served by the granting of the non-mutually exclusive long-form 
    application, it will be granted.
        (5)(i) The auction will be held pursuant to the procedures set 
    forth in Secs. 1.2101 et seq. and 73.5000 et seq. Subsequent to the 
    auction, the FCC will release a Public Notice announcing the close of 
    the auction and identifying the winning bidders. Winning bidders will 
    be subject to the provisions of Secs. 1.2107 and 73.5003 regarding down 
    payments and will be required to submit the appropriate down payment 
    within 10 business days of the Public Notice. Pursuant to Secs. 1.2107 
    and 73.5005, a winning bidder that meets its down payment obligations 
    in a timely manner must, within 30 days of the release of the public 
    notice announcing the close of the auction, submit the appropriate 
    long-form application for each construction permit for which it was the 
    winning bidder. Long-form applications filed by winning bidders shall 
    include the exhibits identified in Sec. 73.5005(a).
        (ii) These applications will be processed and the FCC will 
    periodically release a Public Notice listing such applications that 
    have been accepted for filing and announcing a date by which petitions 
    to deny must be filed in accordance with the provisions of 
    Secs. 73.5006 and 73.3584 of this chapter. If the applicant is duly 
    qualified, and upon examination, the FCC finds that the public 
    interest, convenience and necessity will be served by the granting of 
    the winning bidder's long-form application, a Public Notice will be 
    issued announcing that the construction permit is ready to be granted. 
    Each winning bidder shall pay the balance of its winning bid in a lump 
    sum within 10 business days after release of the Public Notice, as set 
    forth in Secs. 1.2109(a) and 73.5003(c). Construction permits will be 
    granted by the Commission following the receipt of the full payment.
        (iii) All long-form applications will be cut-off as of the date of 
    filing with the FCC and will be protected from subsequently filed long-
    form applications and rulemaking petitions. Applications will be 
    required to protect all previously filed commercial and noncommercial 
    applications. Winning bidders filing long-form applications may change 
    the technical proposals specified in their previously submitted short-
    form applications, but such change may not constitute a major change. 
    If the submitted long-form application would constitute a major change 
    from the proposal submitted in the short-form application or the 
    allotment, the long-form application will be returned pursuant to 
    paragraph (f)(2)(i) of this section.
    
        Note 1 to Sec. 73.3573: Applications to modify the channel and/
    or class of an FM broadcast station to an adjacent channel, 
    intermediate frequency (IF) channel, or co-channel shall not require 
    any other amendments to the Table of Allotments. Such applications 
    may resort to the provisions of the Commission's Rules permitting 
    short spaced stations as set forth in Sec. 73.215 as long as the 
    applicant shows by separate exhibit attached to the application the 
    existence of an allotment reference site which meets the allotment 
    standards, the minimum spacing requirements of Sec. 73.207 and the 
    city grade coverage requirements of Sec. 73.315. This exhibit must 
    include a site map or, in the alternative, a statement that the 
    transmitter will be located on an existing tower. Examples of 
    unsuitable allotment reference sites include those which are 
    offshore, in a national or state park in which tower construction is 
    prohibited, on an airport, or otherwise in an area which would 
    necessarily present a hazard to air navigation.
    
        Note 2 to Sec. 73.3573: Processing of applications for new low 
    power educational FM applications: Pending the Commission's restudy 
    of the impact of the rule changes pertaining to the allocations of 
    10-watt and other low power noncommercial educational FM stations, 
    applications for such new stations, or major changes in existing 
    ones, will not be accepted for filing. Exceptions are: (1) In 
    Alaska, applications for new Class D stations or major changes in 
    existing ones are acceptable for filing; and (2) applications for 
    existing Class D stations to change frequency are acceptable for 
    filing. In (2), upon the grant of such application, the station 
    shall become a Class D (secondary) station. (See First Report and 
    Order, Docket 20735, FCC 78-386, 43 FR 25821, and Second Report and 
    Order, Docket 20735, FCC 78-384, 43 FR 39704.) Effective date of 
    this FCC imposed ``freeze'' was June 15, 1978. Applications which 
    specify facilities of at least 100 watts effective radiated power 
    will be accepted for filing.
    
        Note 3 to Sec. 73.3573: For rules on processing FM translator 
    and booster stations, see Sec. 74.1233 of this chapter.
    
        15. Add Subpart I, which includes Secs. 73.5000 through 73.5009, to 
    read as follows:
    
    PART 73--RADIO BROADCAST SERVICES
    
    Subpart I--Competitive Bidding Procedures
    
    Sec.
    73.5000  Services subject to competitive bidding.
    73.5001  Competitive bidding procedures.
    73.5002  Bidding application and certification procedures; 
    prohibition of collusion.
    73.5003  Submission of upfront payments, down payments and full 
    payments.
    73.5004  Bid withdrawal, default and disqualification.
    73.5005  Filing of long-form applications.
    73.5006  Filing of petitions to deny against long-form applications.
    73.5007  Designated entity provisions.
    73.5008  Definitions applicable for designated entity provisions.
    73.5009  Assignment or transfer of control.
    
    Subpart I--Competitive Bidding Procedures
    
    
    Sec. 73.5000  Services subject to competitive bidding.
    
        (a) Mutually exclusive applications for new facilities and for 
    major changes to existing facilities in the following broadcast 
    services are subject to competitive bidding: AM; FM; FM translator; 
    analog television; low power television; and television translator. 
    Mutually exclusive applications for new facilities and for major 
    changes to existing facilities in the Instructional Television Fixed 
    Service (ITFS) are also subject to competitive bidding. The general 
    competitive bidding procedures found in 47 CFR Part 1, Subpart Q will 
    apply unless otherwise provided in 47 CFR Part 73 and Part 74.
        (b) Mutually exclusive applications for broadcast channels in the 
    reserved portion of the FM band (Channels 200-220) and for television 
    broadcast channels reserved for noncommercial educational use are not 
    subject to competitive bidding procedures.
    
    
    Sec. 73.5001  Competitive bidding procedures.
    
        (a) Specific competitive bidding procedures for broadcast service 
    and ITFS auctions will be set forth by public notice prior to any 
    auction. The Commission may also design and test alternative 
    procedures, including combinatorial bidding and real time bidding. See 
    47 CFR 1.2103 and 1.2104.
        (b) The Commission may utilize the following competitive bidding 
    mechanisms in broadcast service and ITFS auctions:
    
    [[Page 48630]]
    
        (1) Sequencing. The Commission will establish and may vary the 
    sequence in which broadcast service construction permits and ITFS 
    licenses will be auctioned.
        (2) Grouping. In the event the Commission uses either a 
    simultaneous multiple round competitive bidding design or combinatorial 
    bidding in broadcast service or ITFS auctions, the Commission will 
    determine which construction permits or licenses will be auctioned 
    simultaneously or in combination.
        (3) Reservation price. The Commission may establish a reservation 
    price, either disclosed or undisclosed, below which a broadcast 
    construction permit or ITFS license subject to auction will be not 
    awarded.
        (4) Minimum and maximum bid increments. The Commission may, by 
    announcement before or during broadcast service or ITFS auctions, 
    require minimum bid increments in dollar or percentage terms. The 
    Commission may, by announcement before or during broadcast service or 
    ITFS auctions, establish maximum bid increments in dollar or percentage 
    terms.
        (5) Minimum opening bids. The Commission may establish a minimum 
    opening bid for each broadcast construction permit or ITFS license 
    subject to auction.
        (6) Stopping rules. The Commission will establish stopping rules 
    before or during multiple round broadcast service or ITFS auctions in 
    order to terminate the auction within a reasonable time.
        (7) Activity rules. The Commission will establish activity rules 
    which require a minimum amount of bidding activity. In the event that 
    the Commission establishes an activity rule in connection with a 
    simultaneous multiple round auction, each bidder will be entitled to 
    request and will be automatically granted a certain number of waivers 
    of such rule during the auction.
    
    
    Sec. 73.5002  Bidding application and certification procedures; 
    prohibition of collusion.
    
        (a) Prior to any broadcast service or ITFS auction, the Commission 
    will issue a public notice announcing the upcoming auction and 
    specifying the period during which all applicants seeking to 
    participate in an auction must file their applications for new 
    broadcast or ITFS facilities or for major changes to existing 
    facilities. Broadcast service or ITFS applications for new facilities 
    or for major modifications will be accepted only during these specified 
    periods. This initial and other public notices will contain information 
    about the completion and submission of applications to participate in 
    the broadcast or ITFS auction, any materials that must accompany the 
    applications, and any filing fee that must accompany the applications 
    or any upfront payments that will need to be submitted. Such public 
    notices will also, in the event mutually exclusive applications are 
    filed for broadcast construction permits or ITFS licenses, contain 
    information about the method of competitive bidding to be used and more 
    detailed instructions on submitting bids and otherwise participating in 
    the auction. In the event applications are submitted that are not 
    mutually exclusive with any other application in the same service, such 
    applications will be identified by public notice and will not be 
    subjected to auction.
        (b) To participate in broadcast service or ITFS auctions, all 
    applicants must timely submit short-form applications (FCC Form 175), 
    along with all required certifications, information and exhibits, 
    pursuant to the provisions of 47 CFR 1.2105(a) and any Commission 
    public notices. So determinations of mutual exclusivity for auction 
    purposes can be made, applicants for non-table broadcast services or 
    for ITFS must also submit the engineering data contained in the 
    appropriate FCC form (FCC Form 301, FCC Form 346, FCC Form 349 or FCC 
    Form 330). Beginning January 1, 1999, all short-form applications must 
    be filed electronically.
        (c) Applicants in all broadcast service or ITFS auctions will be 
    subject to the provisions of 47 CFR 1.2105(b) regarding the 
    modification and dismissal of their short-form applications. 
    Notwithstanding the general applicability of Section 1.2105(b) to 
    broadcast and ITFS auctions, applicants who file mutually exclusive 
    major modification applications, or mutually exclusive major 
    modification and new station applications, will be permitted to make 
    amendments to their engineering submissions following the filing of 
    their short-form applications so as to resolve their mutual 
    exclusivity.
        (d) The prohibition of collusion set forth in 47 CFR 1.2105(c), 
    which becomes effective upon the filing of short-form applications, 
    shall apply to all broadcast service or ITFS auctions. Notwithstanding 
    the general applicability of Section 1.2105(c) to broadcast and ITFS 
    auctions, applicants who file mutually exclusive major modification 
    applications, or mutually exclusive major modifications and new station 
    applications, will be permitted to resolve their mutual exclusivities 
    by means of engineering solutions or settlements during a limited 
    period after the filing of short-form applications. Such period will be 
    further specified by Commission public notices.
    
    
    Sec. 73.5003  Submission of upfront payments, down payments and full 
    payments.
    
        (a) To be eligible to bid, each bidder in every broadcast service 
    or ITFS auction shall submit an upfront payment prior to the 
    commencement of bidding, as set forth in any public notices and in 
    accordance with 47 CFR 1.2106.
        (b) Within ten (10) business days following the close of bidding 
    and notification to the winning bidders, each winning bidder in every 
    broadcast service or ITFS auction shall make a down payment in an 
    amount sufficient to bring its total deposits up to twenty (20) percent 
    of its high bid(s), as set forth in 47 CFR 1.2107(b).
        (c) Each winning bidder in every broadcast service or ITFS auction 
    shall pay the balance of its winning bid(s) in a lump sum within ten 
    (10) business days after release of a public notice announcing that the 
    Commission is prepared to award the construction permit(s) or 
    license(s), as set forth in 47 CFR 1.2109(a). If a winning bidder fails 
    to pay the balance of its winning bid in a lump sum by the applicable 
    deadline as specified by the Commission, it will be allowed to make 
    payment within ten (10) business days after the payment deadline, 
    provided that it also pays a late fee equal to five (5) percent of the 
    amount due. Broadcast construction permits and ITFS licenses will be 
    granted by the Commission following the receipt of full payment.
    
    
    Sec. 73.5004  Bid withdrawal, default and disqualification.
    
        (a) The Commission shall impose the bid withdrawal, default and 
    disqualification payments set forth in 47 CFR 1.2104(g) upon bidders 
    who withdraw high bids during the course, or after the close, of any 
    broadcast service or ITFS auction, who default on payments due after an 
    auction closes, or who are disqualified. Bidders who are found to have 
    violated the antitrust laws or the Commission's rules in connection 
    with their participation in the competitive bidding process may also be 
    subject to the remedies set forth in 47 CFR 1.2109(d).
        (b) In the event of a default by or the disqualification of a 
    winning bidder in any broadcast service or ITFS auction, the Commission 
    will follow the procedures set forth in 47 CFR 1.2109
    
    [[Page 48631]]
    
    (b)-(c) regarding the reauction of the construction permit(s) or 
    license(s) at issue.
    
    
    Sec. 73.5005  Filing of long-form applications.
    
        (a) Within thirty (30) days following the close of bidding and 
    notification to the winning bidders, each winning bidder must submit an 
    appropriate long-form application (FCC Form 301, FCC Form 346, FCC Form 
    349 or FCC Form 330) for each construction permit or license for which 
    it was the high bidder. Long-form applications filed by winning bidders 
    shall include the exhibits required by 47 CFR 1.2107(d) (concerning any 
    bidding consortia or joint bidding arrangements); Sec. 1.2110(i) 
    (concerning designated entity status, if applicable); and Sec. 1.2112 
    (a) and (b) (concerning disclosure of ownership and real party in 
    interest information, and, if applicable, disclosure of gross revenue 
    information for small business applicants).
        (b) The long-form application should be submitted pursuant to the 
    rules governing the service in which the applicant is a high bidder and 
    according to the procedures for filing such applications set out by 
    public notice. When electronic procedures become available for the 
    submission of long-form applications, the Commission may require all 
    winning bidders to file their long-form applications electronically.
        (c) An applicant that fails to submit the required long-form 
    application under this section, and fails to establish good cause for 
    any late-filed submission, shall be deemed to have defaulted and shall 
    be subject to the payments set forth in 47 CFR 1.2104(g).
        (d) An applicant whose short-form application, submitted pursuant 
    to 47 CFR 73.5002(b), was not mutually exclusive with any other short-
    form application in the same service and was therefore not subject to 
    auction, shall submit an appropriate long-form application within 
    thirty (30) days following release of a public notice identifying any 
    such non-mutually exclusive applicants. The long-form application 
    should be submitted pursuant to the rules governing the relevant 
    service and according to any procedures for filing such applications 
    set out by public notice. The long-form application filed by a non-
    mutually exclusive applicant need not contain the additional exhibits, 
    identified in Sec. 73.5005(a), required to be submitted with the long-
    form applications filed by winning bidders. When electronic procedures 
    become available, the Commission may require any non-mutually exclusive 
    applicants to file their long-form applications electronically.
    
    
    Sec. 73.5006  Filing of petitions to deny against long-form 
    applications.
    
        (a) As set forth in 47 CFR 1.2108, petitions to deny may be filed 
    against the long-form applications filed by winning bidders in 
    broadcast service or ITFS auctions and against the long-form 
    applications filed by applicants whose short-form applications to 
    participate in a broadcast or ITFS auction were not mutually exclusive 
    with any other applicant.
        (b) Within ten (10) days following the issuance of a public notice 
    announcing that a long-form application has been accepted for filing, 
    petitions to deny that application may be filed. Any such petitions 
    must contain allegations of fact supported by affidavit of a person or 
    persons with personal knowledge thereof.
        (c) An applicant may file an opposition to any petition to deny, 
    and the petitioner a reply to such opposition. Allegations of fact or 
    denials thereof must be supported by affidavit of a person or persons 
    with personal knowledge thereof. The time for filing such oppositions 
    shall be five (5) days from the filing date for petitions to deny, and 
    the time for filing replies shall be five (5) days from the filing date 
    for oppositions.
        (d) If the Commission denies or dismisses all petitions to deny, if 
    any are filed, and is otherwise satisfied that an applicant is 
    qualified, a public notice will be issued announcing that the broadcast 
    construction permit(s) or ITFS license(s) is ready to be granted, upon 
    full payment of the balance of the winning bid(s). See 47 CFR 
    73.5003(c). Construction of broadcast stations or ITFS facilities shall 
    not commence until the grant of such permit or license to the winning 
    bidder.
    
    
    Sec. 73.5007  Designated entity provisions.
    
        New entrant bidding credit. A winning bidder that qualifies as a 
    ``new entrant'' may use a bidding credit to lower the cost of its 
    winning bid on any broadcast construction permit. A thirty-five (35) 
    percent bidding credit will be given to a winning bidder if it and/or 
    its owners have no recognizable interest (more than fifty (50) percent 
    or de facto control) in the aggregate, in any other media of mass 
    communications. A twenty-five (25) percent bidding credit will be given 
    to a winning bidder if it and/or its owners, in the aggregate, have a 
    recognizable interest in no more than three mass media facilities. No 
    bidding credit will be given if any of the commonly owned mass media 
    facilities serves the same area as the proposed broadcast station, or 
    if the winning bidder and/or its owners have recognizable interests in 
    more than three mass media facilities.
        (a) The new entrant bidding credit is not available to applicants 
    that control, or whose owners control, in the aggregate, more than 
    fifty (50) percent of any other media of mass communications in the 
    same area as the proposed broadcast facility. The facilities will be 
    considered in the ``same area'' if the following defined areas wholly 
    encompass, or are encompassed by, the proposed broadcast or secondary 
    broadcast facility's relevant contour:
        (1) AM broadcast station--predicted or measured 2mV/m groundwave 
    contour (see 47 CFR 73.183 or 73.186);
        (2) FM broadcast or FM translator station--predicted 1.0 mV/m 
    contour (see 47 CFR 73.313);
        (3) Television broadcast station--Grade A contour (see 47 CFR 
    73.684);
        (4) Low power television or television translator station--the 
    predicted, protected contour (see 47 CFR 74.707(a));
        (5) Cable television system--the franchised community of a cable 
    system;
        (6) Daily newspaper--community of publication; and
        (7) Multipoint Distribution Service station--protected service area 
    (see 47 CFR 21.902(d) or 21.933).
        (b) Unjust enrichment. If a licensee or permittee that utilizes a 
    new entrant bidding credit under this subsection seeks to assign or 
    transfer control of its license or construction permit to an entity not 
    meeting the eligibility criteria for the bidding credit, the licensee 
    or permittee must reimburse the U.S. Government for the amount of the 
    bidding credit, plus interest based on the rate for ten-year U.S. 
    Treasury obligations applicable on the date the construction permit was 
    originally granted, as a condition of Commission approval of the 
    assignment or transfer. If a licensee or permittee that utilizes a new 
    entrant bidding credit seeks to assign or transfer control of a license 
    or construction permit to an entity that is eligible for a lower 
    bidding credit, the difference between the bidding credit obtained by 
    the assigning party and the bidding credit for which the acquiring 
    party would qualify, plus interest based on the rate for ten-year U.S. 
    Treasury obligations applicable on the date the construction permit was 
    originally granted, must be paid to the U.S. Government as a condition 
    of Commission approval of the assignment or transfer. The amount of the
    
    [[Page 48632]]
    
    reimbursement payments will be reduced over time. An assignment or 
    transfer in the first two years after issuance of the construction 
    permit to the winning bidder will result in a forfeiture of one hundred 
    (100) percent of the value of the bidding credit; during year three, of 
    seventy-five (75) percent of the value of the bidding credit; in year 
    four, of fifty (50) percent; in year five, twenty-five (25) percent; 
    and thereafter, no payment. If a licensee or permittee who utilized a 
    new entrant bidding credit in obtaining a broadcast license or 
    construction permit acquires within this five-year reimbursement period 
    an additional broadcast facility or facilities, such that the licensee 
    or permittee would not have been eligible for the new entrant credit, 
    the licensee or permittee will not be required to reimburse the U.S. 
    Government for the amount of the bidding credit.
    
    
    Sec. 73.5008  Definitions applicable for designated entity provisions.
    
        (a) Scope. The definitions in this section apply to 47 CFR 73.5007, 
    unless otherwise specified in that section.
        (b) A medium of mass communications means a daily newspaper; a 
    cable television system; or a license or construction permit for a 
    television station, a low power television or television translator 
    station, an AM, FM or FM translator broadcast station, a direct 
    broadcast satellite transponder, or a Multipoint Distribution Service 
    station.
        (c) The owners of a winning bidder shall include the winning 
    bidder, in the case of a sole proprietor; partner, including limited or 
    ``silent'' partners, in the case of a partnership; the beneficiaries, 
    in the case of a trust; any member, in the case of a nonstock 
    corporation or unincorporated association with members; any member of 
    the governing board (including executive boards, boards of regents, 
    commissions, or similar governmental bodies where each member has one 
    vote), in the case of nonstock corporation or unincorporated 
    association without members; and owners of voting shares, in the case 
    of stock corporations.
    
    
    Sec. 73.5009  Assignment or transfer of control.
    
        (a) The reporting requirement contained in 47 CFR 1.2111(a) shall 
    apply to an applicant seeking approval for a transfer of control or 
    assignment of a broadcast construction permit or license within three 
    years of receiving such permit or license by means of competitive 
    bidding.
        (b) The ownership disclosure requirements contained in 47 CFR 
    1.2112(a) shall apply to an applicant seeking consent to assign or 
    transfer control of a broadcast construction permit or license awarded 
    by competitive bidding.
    
    PART 74--EXPERIMENTAL RADIO, AUXILIARY, SPECIAL BROADCAST AND OTHER 
    PROGRAM DISTRIBUTIONAL SERVICES
    
        16. The authority for part 74 continues to read as follows:
    
        Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 303, 307, and 554.
    
        17. Section 74.910 is amended by adding the two new entries in 
    numerical order to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 74.910  Part 73 application requirements pertaining to ITFS 
    stations.
    
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 73.3522(a)  Amendment of applications.
    
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 73.5000-73.5006  Competitive Bidding Procedures.
    
    * * * * *
        18. Section 74.911 is amended by revising paragraph (c) and 
    removing paragraph (d) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 74.911  Processing of ITFS station applications.
    
    * * * * *
        (c)(1)(i) The FCC will specify by Public Notice, pursuant to 
    Sec. 73.5002, a period for filing ITFS applications for a new station 
    or for major modifications in the facilities of an authorized station. 
    (ii) Such ITFS applicants shall be subject to the provisions of 
    Secs. 1.2105 and the ITFS competitive bidding procedures. See 47 CFR 
    73.5000 et seq.
        (2) [Reserved]
    
    
    Sec. 74.912  [Removed]
    
        19. Section 74.912 is removed.
    
    
    Sec. 74.913  [Removed]
    
        20. Section 74.913 is removed.
        21. Section 74.1233 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 74.1233  Processing FM translator and booster station 
    applications.
    
        (a) Applications for FM translator and booster stations are divided 
    into two groups:
        (1) In the first group are applications for new stations or for 
    major changes in the facilities of authorized stations. In the case of 
    FM translator stations, a major change is any change in frequency 
    (output channel), or change (only the gain should be included in 
    determining amount of change) or increase (but not decrease) in area to 
    be served greater than ten percent of the previously authorized 1 mV/m 
    contour. All other changes will be considered minor. All major changes 
    are subject to the provisions of Secs. 73.3580 and 1.1104 of this 
    chapter pertaining to major changes.
        (2) In the second group are applications for licenses and all other 
    changes in the facilities of the authorized station.
        (b) Applications for booster stations and reserved-band FM 
    translator stations will be processed as nearly as possible in the 
    order in which they are filed. Such applications will be placed in the 
    processing line in numerical sequence, and will be drawn by the staff 
    for study, the lowest file number first. In order that those 
    applications which are entitled to be grouped for processing may be 
    fixed prior to the time processing of the earliest filed application is 
    begun, the FCC will periodically release a Public Notice listing 
    reserved-band applications that have been accepted for filing and 
    announcing a date (not less than 30 days after publication) on which 
    the listed applications will be considered available and ready for 
    processing and by which all mutually exclusive applications and/or 
    petitions to deny the listed applications must be filed.
        (c) In the case of an application for an instrument of 
    authorization, other than a license pursuant to a construction permit, 
    grant will be based on the application, the pleadings filed, and such 
    other matters that may be officially noticed. Before a grant can be 
    made it must be determined that:
        (1) There is not pending a mutually exclusive application filed in 
    accordance with paragraph (b) of this section.
        (2) The applicant is legally, technically, financially and 
    otherwise qualified;
        (3) The applicant is not in violation of any provisions of law, the 
    FCC rules, or established policies of the FCC; and
        (4) A grant of the application would otherwise serve the public 
    interest, convenience and necessity.
        (d) Processing non-reserved band FM translator applications. (1) 
    Applications for minor modifications for non-reserved FM translator 
    stations, as defined in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, may be filed 
    at any time, unless restricted by the FCC, and, generally, will be 
    processed in the order in which they are tendered. The FCC will 
    periodically release a Public Notice listing those applications 
    accepted for filing. All minor modification applications found to be 
    mutually
    
    [[Page 48633]]
    
    exclusive, must be resolved through settlement or technical amendment.
        (2)(i) The FCC will specify by Public Notice, pursuant to 
    Sec. 73.5002(a), a period for filing non-reserved band FM translator 
    applications for a new station or for major modifications in the 
    facilities of an authorized station. FM translator applications for new 
    facilities or for major modifications will be accepted only during 
    these specified periods. Applications submitted prior to the window 
    opening date identified in the Public Notice will be returned as 
    premature. Applications submitted after the specified deadline will be 
    dismissed with prejudice as untimely.
        (ii) Such FM translator applicants will be subject to the 
    provisions of Secs. 1.2105 and 73.5002(a) regarding the submission of 
    the short-form application, FCC Form 175, and all appropriate 
    certifications, information and exhibits contained therein. To 
    determine which FM translator applications are mutually exclusive, FM 
    translator applicants must submit the engineering data contained in FCC 
    Form 349 as a supplement to the short-form application. Such 
    engineering data will not be studied for technical acceptability, but 
    will be protected from subsequently filed applications as of the close 
    of the window filing period. Determinations as to the acceptability or 
    grantability of an applicant's proposal will not be made prior to an 
    auction.
        (iii) FM translator applicants will be subject to the provisions of 
    Sec. 1.2105 regarding the modification and dismissal of their short-
    form applications.
        (iv) Consistent with Sec. 1.2105(a), beginning January 1, 1999, all 
    short-form applications must be filed electronically.
        (3) Subsequently, the FCC will release Public Notices:
        (i) identifying the short-form applications received during the 
    appropriate filing period or ``window'' which are found to be mutually 
    exclusive;
        (ii) establishing a date, time and place for an auction;
        (iii) providing information regarding the methodology of 
    competitive bidding to be used in the upcoming auction, bid submission 
    and payment procedures, upfront payment procedures, upfront payment 
    deadlines, minimum opening bid requirements and applicable reserve 
    prices in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 73.5002;
        (iv) identifying applicants who have submitted timely upfront 
    payments and, thus, are qualified to bid in the auction.
        (4) If, during the window filing period, the FCC receives non-
    mutually exclusive applications for a non-reserved FM translator 
    station, a Public Notice will be released identifying the non-mutually 
    exclusive applicants, who will be required to submit the appropriate 
    long form application within 30 days of the Public Notice and pursuant 
    to the provisions of Sec. 73.5005. These non-mutually exclusive 
    applications will be processed and the FCC will periodically release a 
    Public Notice listing such non-mutually exclusive applications 
    determined to be acceptable for filing and announcing a date by which 
    petitions to deny must be filed in accordance with the provisions of 
    Secs. 73.5006 and 73.3584 of this chapter. If the applicants are duly 
    qualified, and upon examination, the FCC finds that the public 
    interest, convenience and necessity will be served by the granting of 
    the non-mutually exclusive long-form application, the same will be 
    granted.
        (5)(i) The auction will be held pursuant to the procedures set 
    forth in Sec. 1.2101. Subsequent to the auction, the FCC will release a 
    Public Notice announcing the close of the auction and identifying the 
    winning bidders. Winning bidders will be subject to the provisions of 
    Sec. 1.2107 regarding down payments and will be required to submit the 
    appropriate down payment within 10 business days of the Public Notice. 
    Pursuant to Sec. 1.2107, a winning bidder that meets its down payment 
    obligations in a timely manner must, within 30 days of the release of 
    the public notice announcing the close of the auction, submit the 
    appropriate long-form application for each construction permit for 
    which it was the winning bidder. Long-form applications filed by 
    winning bidders shall include the exhibits identified in Sec. 73.5005.
        (ii) These applications will be processed and the FCC will 
    periodically release a Public Notice listing such applications that 
    have been accepted for filing and announcing a date by which petitions 
    to deny must be filed in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 73.3584 
    of this chapter. If the applicants are duly qualified, and upon 
    examination, the FCC finds that the public interest, convenience and 
    necessity will be served by the granting of the winning bidder's long-
    form application, a Public Notice will be issued announcing that the 
    construction permit is ready to be granted. Each winning bidder shall 
    pay the balance of its winning bid in a lump sum within 10 business 
    days after release of the Public Notice, as set forth in 
    Sec. 1.2109(a). Construction permits will be granted by the Commission 
    following the receipt of the full payment.
        (iii) All long-form applications will be cut-off as of the date of 
    filing with the FCC and will be protected from subsequently filed long-
    form translator applications. Applications will be required to protect 
    all previously filed applications. Winning bidders filing long-form 
    applications may change the technical proposals specified in their 
    previously submitted short-form applications, but such change may not 
    constitute a major change. If the submitted long-form application would 
    constitute a major change from the proposal submitted in the short-form 
    application or the allotment, the long-form application will be 
    returned pursuant to paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section.
        (e) Selection of mutually exclusive reserved band FM translator 
    applications.
        (1) Applications for FM translator stations proposing to provide 
    fill-in service (within the primary station's protected contour) of the 
    commonly owned primary station will be given priority over all other 
    applications.
        (2) Where applications for FM translator stations are mutually 
    exclusive and do not involve a proposal to provide fill-in service of 
    commonly owned primary stations, the FCC may stipulate different 
    frequencies as necessary for the applicants.
        (3) Where there are no available frequencies to substitute for a 
    mutually exclusive application, the FCC will base its decision on the 
    following priorities:
        (i) first-full-time aural services;
        (ii) second full-time aural services; and
        (iii) other public interest matters including, but not limited to 
    the number of aural services received in the proposed service area, the 
    need for or lack of public radio service, and other matters such as the 
    relative size of the proposed communities and the growth rate.
        (4) Where the procedures in paragraphs (e)(1), (e)(2) and (e)(3) of 
    this section fail to resolve the mutual exclusivity, the applications 
    will be processed on a first-come-first-served basis.
    
    [FR Doc. 98-23963 Filed 9-10-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
11/10/1998
Published:
09/11/1998
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
98-23963
Dates:
November 10, 1998.
Pages:
48615-48633 (19 pages)
Docket Numbers:
MM Docket No. 97-234, GC Docket No. 92-52, and GEN Docket No. 90-264, FCC 98-194
PDF File:
98-23963.pdf
CFR: (43)
47 CFR 73.26(a)
47 CFR 73.5002(a)
47 CFR 73.3522(a)
47 CFR 73.5002(a)
47 CFR 1.2109(a)
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