98-19415. Cable Compulsory Licenses: Application of the 3.75% Rate  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 142 (Friday, July 24, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 39737-39739]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-19415]
    
    
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    LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
    
    Copyright Office
    
    37 CFR Parts 201 and 256
    
    [Docket No. RM 98-4]
    
    
    Cable Compulsory Licenses: Application of the 3.75% Rate
    
    AGENCY: Copyright Office, Library of Congress.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Copyright Office is amending its rules in order to clarify 
    how a cable system shall calculate its royalty fees when it carries a 
    distant signal which under the former Federal Communications 
    Commission's regulations would be considered a permitted signal in some 
    communities and a non-permitted signal in others. These amendments also 
    make clear that both the base rate fee and the 3.75% fee
    
    [[Page 39738]]
    
    shall be applied toward the statutory minimum fee.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: August 24, 1998.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: David O. Carson, General Counsel, or 
    Tanya M. Sandros, Attorney Advisor, Copyright GC/I&R, P.O. Box 70400, 
    Southwest Station, Washington, DC 20024. Telephone (202) 707-8380 or 
    Telefax (202) 707-8366.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section 111 of the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C., 
    establishes a compulsory license which authorizes a cable system to 
    make secondary transmissions of copyrighted works embodied in broadcast 
    signals provided that it pays a royalty fee according to the fee 
    structure set out in section 111 and meets all other conditions of the 
    statutory license. The license also provides for an opportunity to 
    adjust the statutory royalty rates once every five years, 17 U.S.C. 
    803(a)(2), or whenever the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) 
    amends its rules to allow a cable system to carry additional signals 
    beyond the local service area of the primary transmitter, or its rules 
    governing syndicated program and sports exclusivity. 17 U.S.C. 
    801(b)(2)(B)-(C).
        In 1982, the former Copyright Royalty Tribunal (CRT) concluded a 
    rate adjustment proceeding in response to an FCC order repealing its 
    distant signal carriage and program syndication exclusivity 
    restrictions on cable retransmission; wherein the CRT created two new 
    rate structures, apart from those set by statute, to compensate the 
    copyright owners for the loss of the surrogate copyright protection 
    afforded them under the FCC rules: a 3.75% rate for the secondary 
    transmission of formerly non-permitted distant signals, and a 
    syndicated exclusivity surcharge for the secondary transmission of 
    permitted signals that had been subject to the FCC's former syndicated 
    program exclusivity regulations. 47 FR 52146 (November 19, 1982).
        Although the Copyright Office adopted final rules to implement the 
    new rate structure of the CRT in 1984, the rules did not specify how a 
    cable system was to calculate its royalty obligation for the carriage 
    of a distant signal which under the former FCC rules was a permitted 
    signal in some communities and a non-permitted signal in others. 
    Instead, the Office allowed each cable system to determine whether to 
    report the signal as entirely permitted, entirely non-permitted, or as 
    partially permitted/partially non-permitted, and calculate its royalty 
    obligation accordingly.
        This practice came to an end when, in April, 1997, the Copyright 
    Office adopted a final rule which requires a cable system to calculate 
    the 3.75% rate fees for distant signals on a partially permitted/
    partially non-permitted basis. 62 FR 23360 (April 30, 1997). Under the 
    new rule, a cable system shall pay the base rate with respect to those 
    communities where the signal would be considered permitted under the 
    FCC's former distant carriage rules in effect on June 24, 1981 (or in 
    the case of those systems that commenced operation after June 24, 1981, 
    would have been considered permitted under those rules), and the 3.75% 
    rate with respect to those communities where the signal would be 
    considered non-permitted. In each case, however, the cable system must 
    base its calculations upon the total amount of gross receipts from 
    subscribers within the relevant community without regard to whether the 
    subscriber actually receives the distant signal.
        To assure uniformity in the reporting process and to clarify that 
    both the base rate fees and the 3.75% rate fees shall be applied toward 
    the minimum fee, the Copyright Office proposed additional amendments to 
    its rules detailing how a cable system was to report and calculate its 
    royalty fees for the carriage of a partially permitted/partially non-
    permitted distant signal. 63 FR 26756 (May 14, 1998). In response to 
    the proposed amendments, the Joint Sports Claimants (JSC), the Motion 
    Picture Association of America, Inc. (MPAA), and the National Cable 
    Television Association (NCTA) filed comments with the Copyright Office.
        While no party objects to the underlying rational for the proposed 
    amendments,1 both JSC and MPAA request clarification of the 
    regulatory language to make it clear that a cable system may not 
    ``prorate gross receipts within communities--claiming that they are not 
    required to apply the 3.75 rate (or any other rate) to revenues from 
    subscribers who do not actually receive the signal in question.'' JSC 
    comment at 2-3 (emphasis omitted); see also MPAA comment at 1-2. 
    Because two of the three parties found the proposed regulatory language 
    somewhat ambiguous on this point, the Copyright Office is adopting the 
    language proposed by JSC, since the proposed change merely restates in 
    an affirmative manner the obligation of a cable system to pay royalties 
    based on gross receipts from all subscribers within the relevant 
    community.
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        \1\ JSC continues to oppose the formation of subscriber groups 
    which would reduce either the value of the distant signal equivalent 
    or a system's gross receipts. See Comments of the Joint Sports 
    Claimants in Docket No. 89-2A (filed February 23, 1995); Comments of 
    Joint Sports Claimants in Docket No. 89-2 (filed December 1, 1989). 
    Nevertheless, JSC has supported the premise of the current rule. In 
    its December 1, 1989 comment, JSC stated that it ``continue[s] to 
    believe that a cable operator should be required to pay 1) the 3.75 
    percent rate on gross receipts derived from subscribers located in 
    communities where the particular signal could not have been carried 
    under the former FCC rules; and 2) the statutory (non-3.75 percent) 
    rates on gross receipts derived from all other subscribers.'' JSC 
    comment in Docket No. RM 89-2 at 10.
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        As noted by NCTA, these amendments are tailored narrowly and 
    address only the calculation of royalties for the carriage of a 
    partially permitted/partially non-permitted distant signal. They do not 
    resolve any issues concerning the reporting and payment of royalty fees 
    for merged and acquired systems. These questions, which remain 
    unresolved today, were the subject of earlier rulemaking proceedings, 
    see Docket No. RM 89-2 and Docket No. 89-2A, which the Office 
    terminated until further notice when Congress asked the Copyright 
    Office to prepare a report on the compulsory license scheme. 62 FR 
    23360 (April 30, 1997).
    
    List of Subjects
    
    37 CFR Part 201
    
        Cable television, Copyright, Jukeboxes, Literary works, Satellites.
    
    37 CFR Part 256
    
        Cable television, Copyright.
    
        In consideration of the foregoing, 37 CFR parts 201 and 256 are 
    amended as follows:
    
    PART 201--GENERAL PROVISIONS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 201 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 17 U.S.C. 702.
    
        2. Section 201.17(h)(2)(iv) is amended by adding the phrase ``and 
    the syndicated exclusivity surcharge, where applicable,'' after the 
    phrase ``the current base rate'' and by adding two sentences to the end 
    of the paragraph to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 201.17  Statements of Account covering compulsory licenses for 
    secondary transmissions by cable systems.
    
    * * * * *
        (h) * * *
        (2) * * *
        (iv) * * * The calculations shall be based upon the gross receipts 
    from all subscribers, within the relevant communities, for the basic 
    service of providing secondary transmissions of primary broadcast 
    transmitters, without regard to whether those subscribers
    
    [[Page 39739]]
    
    actually received the station in question. For partially-distant 
    stations, gross receipts shall be the total gross receipts from 
    subscribers outside the local service area.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 256--ADJUSTMENT OF ROYALTY FEE FOR CABLE COMPULSORY LICENSE
    
        3. The authority citation for part 256 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 17 U.S.C. 702, 802.
    
        4. Section 256.2(a)(1) is amended by adding the letter ``s'' to the 
    word ``fee'' and by adding the phrase ``and (c)'' to the end of the 
    paragraph after ``(4)''.
        5. In Sec. 256.2 the concluding text of paragraph (c) is amended by 
    adding the phrase ``(2) through (4)'' after the phrase ``royalty rates 
    specified in paragraphs (a)''.
    
        Dated: July 1, 1998.
    Marybeth Peters,
    Register of Copyrights.
    
        So approved.
    James H. Billington,
    The Librarian of Congress.
    [FR Doc. 98-19415 Filed 7-23-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 1410-31-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
8/24/1998
Published:
07/24/1998
Department:
U.S. Copyright Office, Library of Congress
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
98-19415
Dates:
August 24, 1998.
Pages:
39737-39739 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. RM 98-4
PDF File:
98-19415.pdf
CFR: (1)
37 CFR 201.17