96-10051. Telecommunications Act of 1996; Broadcast License Terms  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 79 (Tuesday, April 23, 1996)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 17864-17866]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-10051]
    
    
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    
    47 CFR Parts 73 and 74
    
    [MM Docket No. 96-90, FCC 96-169]
    
    
    Telecommunications Act of 1996; Broadcast License Terms
    
    AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
    
    ACTION: Proposed rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: We issue this Notice of Proposed Rule Making (``NPRM'') to 
    implement Section 203 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (``Telecom 
    Act'') (Broadcast License Terms). Section 203 eliminates the statutory 
    distinction between the maximum allowable license terms for television 
    stations and radio stations, and provides that such licenses may be for 
    terms ``not to exceed 8 years.'' Amendment of the Commission's Rules is 
    necessary to conform them to Section 203 of the Telecom Act. We seek 
    comment on our proposal to amend our rules to extend broadcast license 
    terms to 8 years, as well as on our proposal for implementing this 
    change within the framework of existing license renewal cycles.
    
    DATES: Comments are due on or before May 20, 1996, and reply comments 
    are due on or before June 4, 1996. Written comments by the public on 
    the proposed and/or modified information collections are due on or 
    before May 20, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: Federal Communications Commission, Washington, D.C. 20554.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert Somers (202-418-2130), Mass 
    Media Bureau.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a synopsis of the Notice of Proposed 
    Rule Making in MM Docket No. 96-90, FCC 96-169, adopted April 11, 1996 
    and released April 12, 1996. The complete text of this Notice of 
    Proposed Rule Making is available for inspection and copying during 
    normal business hours in the FCC Reference Center (Room 239), 1919 M 
    Street NW., Washington, D.C., and also may be purchased from the 
    Commission's copy contractor, International Transcription Service, 
    (202) 857-3800, 2100 M Street, N.W., Suite 140, Washington, DC 20037.
    
    Synopsis of Notice of Proposed Rule Making Extending License Terms for 
    Broadcast Facilities
    
        1. Section 307(c) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 
    U.S.C. Sec. 307(c), authorizes the Commission to establish the period 
    or periods for which licenses shall be granted or renewed. Prior to the 
    enactment of the Telecom Act, Section 307(c) provided that the licenses 
    of television stations, including low power TV stations, could be 
    issued for a term of no longer than 5 years. It further provided that 
    license terms for radio stations, including auxiliary facilities, could 
    be for a period not to exceed 7 years. These were the maximum allowable 
    license terms and the Commission had the discretion to grant or renew a 
    broadcast license for a shorter period if the public interest, 
    convenience, and necessity would be served by such action. Consistent 
    with these statutory provisions, Section 73.1020 of the Commission's 
    Rules currently states that ``[r]adio broadcasting stations will 
    ordinarily be renewed for 7 years and TV broadcast stations will be 
    renewed for 5 years. However, if the FCC finds that the public 
    interest, convenience and necessity will be served thereby, it may 
    issue either an initial license or a renewal thereof for a lesser 
    term.'' Section 73.1020 also sets forth a renewal schedule for 
    broadcast stations based on the geographical region of the country in 
    which each station is located.
        2. Section 203 of the Telecom Act amends Section 307(c) of the 
    Communications Act to read as follows:
    
        Each license granted for the operation of a broadcasting station 
    shall be for a term of not to exceed 8 years. Upon application 
    therefor, a renewal of such license may be granted from time to time 
    for a term of not to exceed 8 years from the date of expiration of 
    the preceding license, if the Commission finds that public interest, 
    convenience, and necessity would be served thereby. Consistent with 
    the foregoing provisions of this subsection, the Commission may by 
    rule prescribe the period or periods for which licenses shall be 
    granted and renewed for particular classes of stations, but the 
    Commission may not adopt or follow any rule which would preclude it, 
    in any case involving a station of a particular class, from granting 
    or renewing a license for a shorter period than that prescribed for 
    stations of such class if, in its judgment, the public interest, 
    convenience, or necessity would be served by such action.
    
        3. Length of License Terms. Although the language of Section 203 of 
    the Telecom Act lengthens the maximum permissible broadcast license 
    term to 8 years for both television and radio stations, the statute 
    does not require the Commission to extend license terms to 8 years as a 
    matter of course. The statutory language provides that licenses are to 
    have terms ``not to exceed 8 years'' and expressly states that the 
    Commission ``may'' grant renewals for terms not to exceed 8 years if 
    the public interest would be served thereby. Moreover, the language 
    indicates that the Commission may, by rule, adopt different license 
    terms for different classes of stations. Given this discretion under 
    the statute regarding how we might amend our rules, we believe it is 
    appropriate to determine through notice and comment rulemaking the 
    proper length of broadcast license terms as a general matter.
        4. For several reasons, we propose to amend our Rules to provide 
    that broadcast licenses ordinarily have the maximum 8-year term 
    authorized under the statute. First, the practice of ordinarily 
    granting television and radio licenses for the maximum terms will 
    reduce the burden to broadcasters of seeking the periodic renewal of 
    their licenses and the associated burdens on the Commission. Second, it 
    is consistent with past Commission practice; our
    
    [[Page 17865]]
    
    current rules provide for the maximum license terms in accordance with 
    previous statutory maximum terms of 5 years for television stations and 
    7 years for radio stations. Finally, this approach is consistent with 
    the legislative history of the Telecom Act. While the statutory 
    language provides the Commission discretion in this area, the 
    Conference Report indicates that Congress intended the Commission to 
    adopt the maximum term, stating that Section 203 of the Telecom Act 
    ``extends the license term for broadcast licenses to eight years for 
    both television and radio.''
        5. We seek comment on this proposal to amend Sections 73.1020 and 
    74.15 of our Rules to provide that the Commission will ordinarily grant 
    licenses for the 8-year terms allowed by Section 203 of the Telecom 
    Act. Irrespective of what the Commission ultimately determines to be an 
    appropriate standard license term, we note that Section 203 of the 
    Telecom Act explicitly reserves the Commission's authority to grant 
    individual licenses for less than the statutory maximum if the public 
    interest, convenience, and necessity would be served by such action.
        6. Classes of Stations. Section 203 of the Telecom Act states in 
    part:
    
    
    ``the Commission may by rule prescribe the period or periods for which 
    licenses shall be granted and renewed for particular classes of 
    stations. * * *'' While this provision provides us authority to 
    designate different license terms for particular classes of stations 
    (provided that they do not exceed 8 years), we propose to treat all but 
    experimental broadcast stations uniformly.
    
        7. With respect to television and radio stations the statute 
    eliminates the current distinction between these services for purposes 
    of establishing the maximum allowable license terms. In this regard, 
    the legislative history states: ``By applying a uniform license term * 
    * * for all broadcast station licenses, the Committee simply recognizes 
    that there is no reason for longer radio license terms than for 
    television licenses. The Committee intends that applying a uniform 
    license term * * * for radio and television licenses will enable the 
    Commission to operate more efficiently in the awarding of new or 
    renewed licenses for all broadcast licenses.'' H.R. Rep. No. 104-204, 
    Section 304, 104th Cong., 1st Sess. 122 (1995).
        8. Similarly, we propose to track the approach we take with full-
    service stations and adopt an 8-year license term for FM and TV 
    translator facilities and low power TV stations, as well as for 
    international broadcasting stations. This approach is consistent with 
    our previous decision to treat these different classes of stations 
    uniformly. See Report and Order in MM Docket No. 92-168, 59 FR 63049, 
    December 7, 1994. We further propose to continue our practice, set 
    forth in Sections 74.15(b) and (c) of our Rules, of tying the license 
    terms for auxiliary and booster facilities to the license terms of the 
    broadcast stations with which they are associated. We seek comment on 
    these proposals.
        9. Finally, we propose to continue our practice, set forth in 
    Section 74.15(a) of our Rules, of issuing licenses for experimental 
    broadcast stations for a term of 1 year. We believe that a longer 
    license term would not be warranted for this class of station and seek 
    comment on this proposal.
        10. Implementation of Amended License Term Provisions. Section 203 
    of the Telecom Act and the legislative history are silent as to whether 
    existing broadcast station licenses may be modified immediately to 
    conform to any new license terms that may be adopted.
        11. The implementation issue is important because of the logistics 
    involved in renewing broadcast licenses. Under Sections 73.1020 and 
    74.15 of the Commission's Rules, all of the licenses for a particular 
    class of broadcast stations expire at fixed intervals over a 3-year 
    period. To stagger the processing of renewal applications and thus 
    perform this task more efficiently, the country is divided into 18 
    different regions containing 1 or more states for purposes of 
    establishing synchronized schedules for radio and television license 
    renewals. The radio renewal schedule and the television renewal 
    schedule operate on separate and distinct cycles that do not run 
    concurrently. Accordingly, once all radio licenses have been renewed as 
    scheduled, there is a 50-month hiatus before the radio renewal cycle 
    begins again. Similarly, once all television licenses have been renewed 
    as scheduled, there is also a 26-month hiatus before the television 
    renewal cycle begins again.
        12. Because of the cyclical nature of this process, any change in 
    the length of the license term implemented in the middle of a renewal 
    cycle could adversely affect the synchronization of the whole process.
        13. By the time the Telecom Act of 1996 was enacted in February 
    1996, the renewal cycle had already begun for radio stations in several 
    regions of the country. The practical effect of this situation is that 
    radio licenses that have already been renewed for the current maximum 
    allowable 7-year term will have shorter terms than radio licenses 
    renewed later in the renewal cycle, if we adopt the 8-year term we now 
    propose. When these previously granted licenses expire the radio 
    renewal process will no longer be synchronized. We wish to maintain the 
    efficiencies inherent in the existing synchronized schedule of renewal 
    cycles. Should we ultimately adopt an 8-year license term, we therefore 
    propose to implement it as follows. For broadcast renewal applications 
    that are granted after the effective date of a decision in this 
    proceeding, we propose to ordinarily grant the renewed license for the 
    maximum proposed term of 8 years. For renewal applications that have 
    been filed as part of the current renewal cycle (i.e., the cycle 
    beginning October 1, 1995 for radio stations) and that have been 
    granted only the maximum 7-year license term provided under our current 
    rules because they were processed prior to a decision in this 
    proceeding, we propose to extend by rule the already renewed 7-year 
    license term for such stations to the proposed 8-year term. These 
    licenses will thus be modified by rule to have the new maximum term and 
    will come up for renewal in synchronization with future radio renewal 
    cycles. The Commission adopted a similar approach in 1983 when it 
    extended existing common carrier and satellite licenses from 5 to 10 
    years. As noted in that decision, the Commission's authority to modify 
    the provisions of existing licenses by rulemaking has been upheld on 
    several occasions. This type of approach is also consistent with the 
    discretion we are given by the Telecom Act to prescribe rules governing 
    the period or periods for which licenses are granted for particular 
    classes of stations. We solicit comment on this proposed approach for 
    implementing the new maximum broadcast license terms authorized by the 
    Telecom Act.
        14. By this Notice of Proposed Rule Making we request comments on 
    how to best implement the provisions of Section 203 of the Telecom Act. 
    Specifically, we seek comment on whether we should amend Sections 
    73.1020, 73.733, and 74.15 of the Commission's Rules to provide that 
    broadcast licenses ordinarily should have 8-year terms, the maximum 
    provided under the Telecom Act. We also seek comment on the treatment 
    of different classes of broadcast stations and how best to implement 
    the transition to any amended license term in an equitable manner given 
    that the renewal cycle has already begun.
        15. This action is taken pursuant to authority found in Sections 
    4(i), 303(r), and 307(c) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 
    47 U.S.C. 154(i),
    
    [[Page 17866]]
    
    303(r), and 307(c), and Sections 0.204(b), 0.283 and 1.45 of the 
    Commission's Rules, 47 CFR 0.204(b), 0.283 and 1.45.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    47 CFR Part 73
    
        Radio broadcasting, Television broadcasting.
    
    47 CFR Part 74
    
        Radio broadcasting, Television broadcasting.
    
    Federal Communications Commission.
    William F. Caton,
    Acting Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 96-10051 Filed 4-22-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
04/23/1996
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Proposed rule.
Document Number:
96-10051
Dates:
Comments are due on or before May 20, 1996, and reply comments are due on or before June 4, 1996. Written comments by the public on the proposed and/or modified information collections are due on or before May 20, 1996.
Pages:
17864-17866 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
MM Docket No. 96-90, FCC 96-169
PDF File:
96-10051.pdf
CFR: (2)
47 CFR 73
47 CFR 74