95-30458. Copyright, Cable Compulsory License  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 242 (Monday, December 18, 1995)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 65072-65074]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-30458]
    
    
    
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    LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
    
    Copyright Office
    [Docket No. 95-8]
    
    
    Copyright, Cable Compulsory License
    
    AGENCY: Copyright Office, Library of Congress.
    
    ACTION: Notice of policy decision.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Copyright Office of the Library of Congress is announcing 
    a policy decision with respect to the examination and reporting of 
    local broadcast signals in light of the amendment to section 111 of the 
    Copyright Act made by the Satellite Home Viewer Act of 1994. For 
    examining cable statements of account, the Office will use the same ADI 
    list used by the Federal Communications Commission for its must-carry/
    retransmission consent election, and will treat a broadcast signal as 
    local for copyright purposes only within that station's ADI.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Marilyn J. Kretsinger, Acting General 
    Counsel, or William Roberts, Senior Attorney for Compulsory Licenses. 
    Telephone (202) 707-8380. Telefax (202) 707-8366.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        On October 18, 1994, the President of the United States signed into 
    law the Satellite Home Viewer Act of 1994. Public Law No. 103-369. In 
    addition to extending and amending the compulsory license for satellite 
    carriers in 17 U.S.C. 119, the Home Viewer Act expanded the cable 
    compulsory license definition of the ``local service area of a primary 
    transmitter'' in 17 U.S.C. 111 to include a broadcast station's 
    ``television market as defined in section 76.55(e) of title 47, Code of 
    Federal Regulations (as in effect on September 18, 1993), or any 
    modifications to such television market made, on or after September 18, 
    1993, pursuant to section 76.55(e) or 76.59 of title 47 of the Code of 
    Federal Regulations'' (parenthetical in original). The amendment was 
    made effective beginning with the second accounting period of 1994.
        The definition of the ``local service area of a primary 
    transmitter'' in 17 U.S.C. 111(f) determines whether a broadcast 
    station is local or distant to a cable system and consequently when it 
    must submit a royalty fee for retransmission of that signal. Cable 
    systems pay royalties for carriage of distant signals and may 
    retransmit local broadcast signals to their subscribers without 
    incurring copyright liability.1 Prior to the passage of the Home 
    Viewer Act, the local service area definition provided that a broadcast 
    station was local in the area that it could ``insist upon its signal 
    being retransmitted by a cable system pursuant to the rules, 
    regulations and authorizations of the Federal Communications Commission 
    in effect on April 15, 1976* * *'' 17 U.S.C. 111(f) (1976). This was a 
    reference to the Commission's must-carry rules in effect in 1976, and 
    the Copyright Act fixed these rules for all future copyright 
    determinations. Although these must-carry rules were ultimately 
    declared unconstitutional, see Quincy Cable T.V., Inc. v. FCC, 768 F.2d 
    1434 (D.C. Cir. 1985), cert. denied, 476 U.S. 1169 (1986) and Century 
    Communications v. FCC, 835 F.2d 292 (D.C. Cir. 1987), cert. denied, 486 
    U.S. 1032 (1988), they remain in effect for purposes of 17 U.S.C. 111. 
    See Quincy, 768 F.2d at 1454 n. 42. However, because of the passage of 
    time and changes in telecommunications law and policy, the 1976 must-
    carry rules no longer reflect the realities of the current marketplace. 
    Congress, therefore, amended the local service area definition in the 
    Home Viewer Act to provide an additional means of determining the 
    local/distant copyright status of broadcast stations.
    
        \1\There is one exception to this rule: a cable system which 
    retransmits only local broadcast signals must nonetheless submit a 
    minimum royalty fee under 17 U.S.C. 111. However, if the system 
    carries one or more distant signals, royalties are only paid for 
    those distant signals, and the local signals carried are copyright-
    free. As a practical matter, there are very few cable systems which 
    only carry local broadcast signals and no distant signals.
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        The Home Viewer Act amendment provides that, in addition to the 
    area encompassed by the 1976 must-carry rules, a broadcast station is 
    local for copyright purposes in the area that comprises that station's 
    television market as defined in Sec. 76.55(e) of the FCC's rules, and 
    any subsequent modifications made by the FCC to that market. In many 
    circumstances, a station's television market under Sec. 76.55(e) 
    creates a larger local service area than under the 1976 must-carry 
    rules. Cable systems may use either the television market or the 1976 
    must-carry 
    
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    rules, or both, in determining the local service area of each broadcast 
    station they retransmit to their subscribers.
        Section 76.55(e) of the FCC's rules defines a television market for 
    purposes of the Commission's new must-carry rules adopted to implement 
    the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992. 
    Public Law 102-385. The section provides in its entirety:
    
        (e) Television market. For purposes of the must-carry rules:
        (1) A local commercial broadcast television station's market 
    shall be defined as its Area of Dominant Influence (ADI) as 
    determined by Arbitron and published in its Television ADI Market 
    Guide or any successor publication, as noted below, except that for 
    areas outside the contiguous 48 states the area of dominant 
    influence may be defined using Nielsen's Designated Market Area 
    (DMA), where applicable, and that Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin 
    Islands and Guam will each be considered one ADI;
        (2) A cable system's television market(s) shall be the one or 
    more ADIs in which the communities it serves are located;
        (3) In addition, the county in which a station's community of 
    license is located will be considered within its market.
    
        Note: For the 1993 must-carry/retransmission consent election, 
    the ADI assignments specified in the 1991-1992 Television ADI Market 
    Guide, available from the Arbitron Ratings Co., 312 Marshall Ave., 
    Laurel MD, will apply. ADI assignments will be updated at three year 
    intervals. For the 1996 election period, the 1994-1995 ADI list will 
    be used; the applicable list for the 1999 election will be the 1997-
    1998 list, etc.
    
    47 CFR 76.55(e) (1993). The Home Viewer Act fixes 47 CFR 76.55(e) as of 
    September 18, 1993, but expressly includes any subsequent modifications 
    to television markets made under Sec. 76.55(e) or Sec. 76.59 of the 
    Commission's rules. Modifications were recognized by the Home Viewer 
    Act because, at the time of its passage, the Arbitron Company had 
    discontinued its publication of the Television ADI Market Guide and had 
    filed for bankruptcy.
        Subsequent to the enactment of the Home Viewer Act, the Copyright 
    Office amended its cable and satellite carrier compulsory license rules 
    and discussed the changes brought about by the Act. 59 FR 67635 
    (December 30, 1994). The new definition of the ``local service area of 
    a primary transmitter'' did not require amendment of the rules; 
    however, the Office described the change in the definition:
    
        The other change to the cable compulsory license made by the 
    1994 Home Viewer Act is the broadening of the section 111(f) 
    definition of the ``local service area of a primary transmitter.'' 
    The definition is used to determine when a broadcast station is 
    local or distant to a cable operator, which in turn determines 
    whether the operator must pay a royalty fee for that station. 
    Effective July 1, 1994, the local service area of a broadcast 
    station for copyright purposes also includes the area in which the 
    station is entitled to insist upon carriage of its signal by a cable 
    system (i.e. its must-carry zone), in accordance with the rules of 
    the Federal Communications Commission in effect on September 18, 
    1993, and any subsequent modification of those rules.
    
    Id. To date, this is all the Office has said regarding the change made 
    to the local service area definition by the Home Viewer Act.
    
    II. Policy Issues
    
        Amendment of the definition of the ``local service area of a 
    primary transmitter'' has led to questions in the administration of the 
    cable compulsory license. Two of these questions must be resolved in 
    order for the Copyright Office to administer the cable compulsory 
    license. The first question involves the Copyright Office's use of ADI 
    in its examination of cable statements of account. As discussed above, 
    the amendment to the local service area definition was made effective 
    beginning with the second accounting period of 1994, and cable systems 
    are now using broadcast stations' ADI for determining the local/distant 
    status of the signals. The question has arisen, however, as to the 
    appropriate ADI information to consider in calculating the local 
    service area of a broadcast signal. The Note to 47 CFR 76.55(e) states 
    that the FCC is using the 1991-1992 Television ADI Market Guide for the 
    1993 must-carry/retransmission consent election, and that ADI 
    assignments will be updated at three year intervals.2 Should cable 
    systems use the 1991-1992 Television ADI Market Guide for the 1994/2 
    accounting period and the 1995 accounting year, or should they apply 
    the current ADI list to the corresponding accounting period--i.e. the 
    1994 list to the 1994 accounting year and the 1995 list to the 1995 
    accounting year, where such information is available?
    
        \2\The Note further states that the 1994-1995 ADI list will be 
    used for the 1996 election, the 1997-1998 list for the 1999 
    election, etc. Arbitron, however, discontinued the Market Guide 
    after publication of the 1993-1994 edition. New criteria, presumably 
    Nielsen's Designated Market Area, must be adopted before the 1996 
    must-carry/retransmission consent election, and the Commission has 
    stated that it will address the issue before October 1, 1996. See 
    Opinion & Order in MM Docket No. 92-259 at 10 n. 45 (November 4, 
    1994).
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        The second question involves the determination of a broadcast 
    station's ``television market'' for a cable system that serves a 
    community or communities in more than one county where those counties 
    are assigned to different ADIs. Is the broadcast station local for 
    copyright purposes only in those counties assigned to its ADI, or are 
    there circumstances where the station may be reported as local outside 
    of its ADI?
    
    III. Policy Decision
    
        As part of its responsibility to administer the cable compulsory 
    license, the Copyright Office is resolving both the issues raised in 
    this Notice. With respect to which ADI (or subsequent) list to use in 
    examining statements of account, the Office will use only the list 
    designated by the Commission for the must-carry/retransmission consent 
    election. For determinations of the local/distant status of a broadcast 
    station, the Office is clarifying the circumstances under which a 
    station may be reported as local for copyright purposes.
    
    A. The ADI list
    
        The amended local service area definition expressly adopts 
    Arbitron's ADI list in effect on September 18, 1993, plus any 
    subsequent modifications made to that list pursuant to Sec. 76.55(e) or 
    Sec. 76.59 of the FCC's rules. Section 76.55(e) provides that the ADI 
    list in effect on September 18, 1993, is the list appearing in the 
    1991-1992 Television ADI Market Guide. 47 CFR 76.55(e)(Note). It is 
    further provided that 1991-1992 Television ADI Market Guide list will 
    remain in effect until the time of the 1996 must-carry/retransmission 
    consent, when the 1994-1995 ADI list will be used. While it is presumed 
    that the ADI list applicable for 1996 will account for the termination 
    of publication of the Television ADI Market Guide, Sec. 76.55(e) makes 
    it clear that the Commission will only revise the ADI list at three-
    year intervals. Because of the Home Viewer Act's direct reference to 47 
    CFR 76.55(e), the Copyright Office believes that it is consistent with 
    legislative intent to use only the ADI (or replacement) list used by 
    the Commission for the must-carry/retransmission consent election. 
    Thus, for the 1994/2 accounting period, and both accounting periods for 
    1995, the Copyright Office will use the 1991-1992 Television ADI Market 
    Guide in determining the local/distant status of broadcast signals. 
    Cable operators should use only this list for these accounting periods; 
    in examining Statements of Account, the Copyright Office will not 
    recognize the ADI of a broadcast station derived from any source other 
    than the 1991-1992 Television ADI Market Guide. For the 
    
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    1996, 1997 and 1998 accounting years, cable operators should use the 
    list adopted by the Commission for the 1996 must-carry/retransmission 
    consent election, and, for subsequent years, the list adopted by the 
    Commission for each must-carry/retransmission consent election period. 
    If the Commission should make modifications to television markets in 
    accordance with Secs. 76.55(e) and/or 76.59, or should generate a 
    television market list for the must-carry/retransmission consent 
    election other than at three-year intervals, those modifications should 
    be applied to their corresponding compulsory license accounting periods 
    in determining the local service area of a broadcast station.
    
    B. Local/Distant Status
    
        In the December 30, 1994, adjustment of our regulations to account 
    for the statutory changes made by the Home Viewer Act, we described the 
    Act's amendment to the local service area definition in 17 U.S.C. 
    111(f) as ``includ[ing] the area in which the station is entitled to 
    insist upon carriage of its signal by a cable system (i.e. its must-
    carry zone), in accordance with the rules of the Federal Communications 
    Commission in effect on September 18, 1993, and any subsequent 
    modification of those rules.'' 59 FR 67635 (December 30, 1994). We 
    believe we need to clarify this statement as it relates to cable 
    systems that serve communities in more than one county assigned to 
    different ADIs.
        Cable carriage by one system across one or more ADIs does not 
    appear to be an uncommon occurrence. Each county in the United States 
    is allocated to a market based on which home-market stations receive a 
    preponderance of total viewing. Because many larger cable systems 
    typically serve several counties, a ``straddle'' situation can occur 
    where a cable system carries a broadcast signal assigned to one market 
    in communities within counties assigned to other markets. This 
    situation is further complicated when such carriage is pursuant to the 
    FCC's new must-carry rules. How should cable systems straddling 
    different markets report carriage of broadcast signals in those markets 
    for compulsory license purposes?
        The Home Viewer Act amendment to the 17 U.S.C. 111(f) local service 
    area definition makes it clear that a broadcast station's television 
    market is its ADI. The Home Viewer Act defines ``television market'' by 
    reference to Sec. 76.55(e) of the FCC's rules, which provides that a 
    broadcast station's television market is ``its Area of Dominant 
    Influence (ADI) as determined by Arbitron and published in its 
    Television ADI Market Guide * * *'' 47 CFR 76.55(e)(1). A broadcast 
    station's ADI is also the area in which it is entitled to assert 
    mandatory carriage rights on cable systems located in that ADI. See 
    Broadcast Signal Carriage Issues, 8 FCC Rcd 2965, 2976-2977 (1993). 
    Thus, the Office acknowledged in its December 30, 1994, Federal 
    Register notice the correspondence between a broadcast station's must-
    carry area and its ADI; however, it did not describe what application, 
    if any, this would have to cable systems straddling more than one ADI.
        After reviewing the provisions of the Cable Television Consumer 
    Protection and Competition Act of 1992 (``1992 Cable Act''), Public Law 
    No. 102-385, and the FCC's implementing rules, it is apparent that 
    there are circumstances, e.g., the ``straddle'' situation, where the 
    must-carry zone of a broadcast station exceeds its ADI. The FCC stated 
    in its Report & Order implementing the 1992 Cable Act's must-carry 
    requirements that in circumstances where a cable system serves a 
    community or communities in more than one county and those counties are 
    assigned to different ADIs, ``all broadcast stations in both ADIs will 
    be considered `local' for must-carry purposes.'' 8 FCC Rcd at 2976.
        We do not believe that the application of the must-carry rules 
    adopted pursuant to the 1992 Cable Act have any direct bearing in 
    determining the size of the local service area of a broadcast station 
    for copyright purposes. The copyright local service area is a broadcast 
    station's television market as defined in 47 CFR 76.55(e), which means 
    that it is the station's ADI, plus any modifications made to the ADI by 
    the Commission under Sec. 76.55 or Sec. 76.59 of its rules.3 The 
    Office should not have stated in the December 30, 1994, Federal 
    Register notice that the local service area was equal to the station's 
    must-carry zone, since such zone can, in certain circumstances, be 
    considered to extend beyond a station's ADI. Thus, in the ``straddle'' 
    situation, a cable system may only report carriage of a broadcast 
    station as local under 17 U.S.C. 111 in those communities assigned to 
    the station's ADI, even though the system may have must-carry 
    obligations to deliver the signal to communities located in other ADIs.
    
        \3\We acknowledge that changes made to a station's ADI under 47 
    CFR 76.55(e) or 76.59 will undoubtably be for reasons related to the 
    must-carry rules; however, it is only changes made to a station's 
    ADI under these two rules that matter for copyright purposes.
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        We believe that this interpretation is consistent with Congress' 
    intent in amending the local service area definition. The legislative 
    history to the Home Viewer Act does not indicate any intention to 
    equate the copyright local service area with the must-carry obligation, 
    and to do so would do violence to 17 U.S.C. 111(d)(1)(B) by 
    substantially reducing the occurrence of partially local/partially 
    distant signals. Furthermore, Congress expressly recognized in the 1992 
    Cable Act that broadcast stations could be considered distant signals 
    for copyright purposes in communities where they enjoyed must-carry 
    rights. 1992 Cable Act, section 614(h)(1)(b)(ii). Nothing in the Home 
    Viewer Act indicates an intention to change this result.
    
        Dated: December 4, 1995.
    Marybeth Peters,
    Register of Copyrights.
    
        Approved by:
    James H. Billington,
    The Librarian of Congress.
    [FR Doc. 95-30458 Filed 12-15-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 1410-31-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
12/18/1995
Department:
U.S. Copyright Office, Library of Congress
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of policy decision.
Document Number:
95-30458
Pages:
65072-65074 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 95-8
PDF File:
95-30458.pdf