96-21262. Open Video Systems  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 163 (Wednesday, August 21, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 43160-43178]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-21262]
    
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    47 CFR Part 76
    
    [CS Docket No. 96-46; FCC 96-334]
    
    
    Open Video Systems
    
    AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Third Report and Order and Second Order on Reconsideration 
    adopts and modifies rules and policies concerning open video systems. 
    The Third Report and Order amends our regulations to reflect the 
    provisions regarding open video systems of the Telecommunications Act 
    of 1996 (the ``1996 Act'') with respect to the definition of 
    ``affiliate.'' The Second Order on Reconsideration amends or adopts 
    regulations with respect to open video systems in response to petitions 
    for reconsideration regarding the Second Report and Order in this 
    proceeding. This item further fulfills Congress' mandate in adopting 
    the 1996 Act and will provide guidance to open video system operators, 
    video programming providers, and consumers concerning open video 
    systems.
    
    DATES: Effective Date: The requirements and regulations established in 
    this decision shall become effective upon approval by OMB of the new 
    information requirements adopted herein, but no sooner than September 
    20, 1996. The Commission will publish a document at a later date 
    notifying the public as to the effective date.
        Comments: Written comments by the public on the proposed and/or 
    modified information collections are due on or before September 20, 
    1996. Written comments must be submitted by the Office of Management 
    and Budget (OMB) on the proposed and/or modified information 
    collections on or before October 21, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: A copy of any comments on the information collections 
    contained herein should be submitted to Dorothy Conway, Federal 
    Communications Commission, Room 234, 1919 M Street, NW., Washington, DC 
    20554, or via the Internet to dconway@fcc.gov, and to Timothy Fain, OMB 
    Desk Officer, 10236 NEOB, 725-17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20503 or 
    via the Internet to fain__t@al.eop.gov.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rick Chessen, Cable Services Bureau, 
    (202) 418-7200. For additional information concerning the information 
    collections contained herein, contact Dorothy Conway at 202-418-0217, 
    or via the Internet at dconway@fcc.gov.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a synopsis of the Commission's Third 
    Report and Order and Second Order on Reconsideration in CS Docket No. 
    96-46, FCC No. 96-334, adopted August 7, 1996 and released August 8, 
    1996. The full text of this decision is available for inspection and 
    copying during normal business hours in the FCC Reference Center (room 
    239), 1919 M Street, NW., Washington, DC 20554, and may be purchased 
    from the Commission's copy contractor, International Transcription 
    Service, (202) 857-3800, 1919 M Street, NW., Washington, DC 20554.
        The Second Order on Reconsideration contains proposed and/or 
    modified information collections. It has been submitted to the OMB for 
    review, as required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. The 
    Commission, as part of its continuing effort to reduce paperwork 
    burdens, invites the general public and OMB to comment on the 
    information collections contained in the Second Order on 
    Reconsideration. Comments should address: (a) Whether the proposed 
    collections of information are necessary to the proper performance of 
    the functions of the Commission, including whether the information 
    shall have practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the Commission's 
    burden estimates; (c) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity 
    of the information collected; and (d) ways to minimize the burden of 
    the collection of information on the respondents, including the use of 
    automated collection techniques or other forms of information 
    technology.
        OMB Approval Number: 3060-0700.
        Title: Implementation of Section 302 of the Telecommunications Act 
    of 1996; Open Video Systems.
        Form Number: FCC Form 1275.
        Type of Review: Revision of a currently approved collection.
        Respondents: 740. (10 OVS operators, 250 video programming 
    providers that may request additional Notice of Intent information, 
    file rate complaints, or initiate dispute cases, 60 broadcast stations 
    that may elect type of carriage or make network non-duplication 
    notifications, 100 programming providers that may make notification of 
    invalid rights claimed, 300 must-carry list requesters, 20 oppositions 
    to OVS operator certifications.)
        Number of Responses: 3754. (10 Notices of Intent, 14 certifications 
    of compliance filings and refilings, 250 requests for additional Notice 
    of Intent information, 250 responses to requests for additional Notice 
    of Intent information, 50 rate complaints, 50 rate justifications, 60 
    carriage elections, 10 must-carry recordkeepers, 300 must-carry list 
    requests, 300 provisions of must-carry lists, 1200 notifications of 
    network non-duplication rights to OVS operators, 100 programming 
    provider notifications of invalid rights claimed, 1100 OVS operator 
    notifications of network non-duplication rights to programming 
    providers, 20 oppositions to certifications of compliance, 20 dispute 
    case complainants, and 20 dispute case defendants.)
        Estimated Burden to Respondents: Notice of Intent requirements: 10 
    prospective OVS operators are estimated to be in existence within the 
    next year. Average number of entities that prospective OVS operators 
    must notify with each Notice of Intent: 45. Average burden to each OVS 
    operator to complete a Notice of Intent and to provide copies to all 
    applicable entities: 8 hours apiece; therefore 10 x 8=80 hours. 
    Estimated number of written requests for additional information that 
    will be received subsequent to Notices of Intent: 25 per Notice of 
    Intent x 10 Notices=250. Average burden to prospective video 
    programming providers to make each written request: 2 hours apiece; 
    therefore 10 x 25 x 2=500 hours. Average burden to each OVS operator to 
    provide the additional information to all prospective video programming 
    providers: 8 hours apiece; therefore 10 x 8=80 hours. Total burden for 
    all respondents=80+500+80=660 hours. Form 1275 Certification Process
    
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    requirements: We estimate that 14 certification filings and refilings 
    will result in 10 certified OVS operators. Annual burden to OVS 
    operators to complete certifications and serve on applicable local 
    communities and opposition filers: 2 hours apiece; therefore 14 x 2=28 
    hours. Number of oppositions estimated to be filed with the Commission: 
    2 per certification; therefore 2 x 14=28. Average burden for completing 
    oppositions: 4 hours per opposition; therefore 28 x 4=112 hours. Total 
    burden for all respondents: 28+112=140 hours.
        Rate Justification requirements: Estimated number of rate 
    complaints that video programming providers will file: 5 per OVS 
    operator; therefore 10 x 5=50. Estimated number of rate justifications 
    filed by OVS operators in response to rate complaints: 50. Burden to 
    video programming providers for filing complaints: 1 hour per 
    complaint; therefore 50 x 1=50 hours. Burden to OVS operators for 
    filing rate justifications: 20 hours per justification; therefore 
    10 x 5 x 20=1000 hours. Total burden for all respondents: 50+1,000=1050 
    hours.
        Must-Carry and Retransmission Consent requirements: Number of OVS 
    operators: 10. Average number of broadcast stations in each OVS 
    operator's area of carriage: 6. Average burden to broadcast stations 
    for each election for must-carry or retransmission consent: 2 hours per 
    election; therefore 10 x 6 x 2 hours=120 hours. Annual recordkeeping 
    burden for OVS operators to maintain list of its broadcast stations 
    carried in fulfillment of must-carry requirements: 4 hours per OVS 
    operator; therefore 10 x 4=40 hours. Estimated annual number of written 
    requests received by OVS operators: 30 per OVS operator; therefore 
    10 x 30=300. Burden for completing written requests: .25 hours per 
    request; therefore 10 x 30 x .25=75 hours. Burden to OVS operators to 
    respond to requests: .25 hours per request; therefore 10 x 30 x .25=75 
    hours. Total burden for all respondents: 120+40+75+75=310 hours.
        Sports Exclusivity, Network Non-Duplication and Syndicated 
    Exclusivity requirements: Estimated number of notifications filed by 
    television broadcast stations to notify OVS operators of exclusive or 
    non-duplication rights being exercised: 6 stations in each OVS 
    operator's area of carriage x 20 annual notifications x 10 OVS 
    operators=1200. Burden to television stations to make notifications: .5 
    hours per notification; therefore 1200 x .5=600 hours. Estimated number 
    of notifications filed by programming providers to notify OVS operators 
    of invalid exclusivity rights claimed: 100. Burden to programming 
    providers to make notifications: .5 hours per notification; therefore 
    100 x .5 hours=50 hours. Burden for OVS operator to make notifications 
    to delete signals available to all programming providers on their 
    systems: 1 hour per notification x 1100 occurrences=1100 hours. Total 
    burden for all respondents: 600+150+100=1750 hours.
        Dispute Resolution requirements: Estimated number of notices filed 
    by complainant: 20. Estimated number of defendants' responses to 
    notices filed: 20. Average burden for each notice and response to 
    notice: 4 hours apiece; therefore 40 x 4=160 hours. We estimate that 
    the 20 notices will result in the initiation of 10 dispute cases. The 
    average burden for complainants and defendants for undergoing all 
    aspects of the dispute case: 25 hours per case; therefore 20 (10 
    complainants+10 defendants) x 25=500 hours. Total burden to all 
    respondents: 160+500=660 hours.
        Total Annual Burden to Respondents: 4570 hours. (660+140+1050+ 
    310+1750+660).
        Estimated Cost to Respondents: Notices of Intent costs of 
    stationery and postage at $2 apiece for (10 Notices of Intent x 45 
    entities)+250 requests for additional information+250 responses to 
    requests for additional information=$1900.
        Form 1275 Certification Process costs of stationery, diskettes, and 
    postage at $10 for 14 filings and refilings sent to the Commission and 
    all applicable local communities=$140. Costs of stationery and postage 
    at $2 apiece for 28 opposition filings=$48. $140+$48=$188.
        Rate Justifications costs of stationery and postage at $2 apiece 
    for 50 rate complaints+50 rate justifications=$200.
        Must-Carry and Retransmission Consent costs of stationery and 
    postage at $2 apiece for 60 carriage elections+300 requests for 
    lists+300 provisions of lists=$1320.
        Sports Exclusivity, Network Non-Duplication and Syndicated 
    Exclusivity costs of stationery and postage at $2 apiece for 1200 
    notifications to OVS operators+100 notifications of invalid rights 
    claimed+1100 OVS operator notifications to programming providers=$4800.
        Dispute Resolutions costs of stationery and postage at $2 apiece 
    for 20 notices+20 responses to notices=$80. Costs of stationery and 
    postage at $10 apiece for 10 complainants in dispute cases+10 
    defendants in dispute cases=$200. $80+$200=$280.
        Total Estimated Costs to Respondents: $8688. ($1900+ 
    $188+$200+$1320+ $4800+ $280).
        Needs and Uses: The information collections contained herein are 
    necessary to implement the statutory provisions for Open Video Systems 
    contained in the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
    
    I. Introduction
    
        1. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 added Section 653 to the 
    Communications Act, establishing open video systems as a new framework 
    for entry into the video programming marketplace. Section 653 required 
    that the Commission, within six months after the date of enactment of 
    the 1996 Act, ``complete all actions necessary (including any 
    reconsideration) to prescribe regulations'' to govern the operation of 
    open video systems. Accordingly, on March 11, 1996, the Commission 
    issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking regarding open video systems. 
    Report and Order and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in CS Docket No. 96-
    46 and CC Docket No. 87-266 (terminated), 61 FR 10496 (March 14, 1996), 
    FCC 96-99, released March 11, 1996 (``NPRM''). Based on the record 
    submitted in response to the NPRM, on May 31, 1996, the Commission 
    adopted a Second Report and Order in which we prescribed rules and 
    policies for governing the establishment and operation of open video 
    systems. Second Report and Order in CS Docket No. 96-46, 61 FR 28698 
    (June 5, 1996), FCC 96-249, released June 3, 1996 (``Second Report and 
    Order'').
        2. In this Second Order on Reconsideration, we address issues 
    raised in these filings, and modify or clarify our regulations 
    accordingly. In addition, in the Order and Notice of Proposed 
    Rulemaking in CS Docket No. 96-85 (``Cable Reform Proceeding''), we 
    sought comment on the definition of ``affiliate'' in the context of 
    open video systems. Order and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in CS 
    Docket No. 96-85 (Implementation of the Cable Act Reform Provisions of 
    the Telecommunications Act of 1996) (``Cable Reform Proceeding''), 61 
    FR 19013 (April 30, 1996) 11 FCC Rcd 5937 (1996). In light of the six-
    month deadline set by Congress for the Commission to establish final 
    open video system regulations, we address the affiliate issue in this 
    Third Report and Order.
    
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    II. Third Report and Order--Definition of ``Affiliate''
    
        3. Background. In the Cable Reform Proceeding, we specifically 
    sought comment regarding the definition of ``affiliate'' in the context 
    of the new statutory provisions governing open video systems. We 
    subsequently received comments in the Cable Reform Proceeding 
    addressing this issue. For purposes of our decision in this Third 
    Report and Order, we incorporate those comments to the extent they 
    specifically address the definition of affiliation in the context of 
    the statutory provisions for open video systems. We noted that Congress 
    added a new definition of ``affiliate'' in Section 3 of Title I of the 
    Communications Act. This new provision defined ``affiliate'' for 
    purposes of the Act, unless the context otherwise requires, as: a 
    person that (directly or indirectly) owns or controls, is owned or 
    controlled by, or is under common ownership or control with, another 
    person. For purposes of this paragraph, the term ``own'' means to ``own 
    an equity interest (or the equivalent thereof) of more than 10 percent. 
    We noted also, however, that Congress did not alter the separate 
    definition of ``affiliate'' set forth under Title VI. Under Title VI, 
    the term ``affiliate'' is defined, when used in relation to any person, 
    to mean ``another person who owns or controls, is owned or controlled 
    by, or is under common ownership or control with, such person.'' We 
    sought comment regarding the definition of the term ``affiliate'' in 
    the context of the new statutory provisions for open video systems. We 
    will address the affiliation definition for these provisions in the 
    Cable Reform Proceeding.
        4. Discussion. We agree with those commenters that argue that the 
    new definition of ``affiliate'' in Title I does not apply to matters 
    under Title VI since Title VI contains a separate definition of that 
    term that does not set a percentage threshold as to what constitutes 
    ownership. For our purposes, therefore, we must determine the point at 
    which an open video system operator's ownership or control of another 
    entity, or another entity's ownership or control of the open video 
    system operator, makes that entity an affiliate for purposes of Section 
    653. In defining ``affiliate'' for purposes of Section 653, we will 
    adopt the attribution standard that we use in the program access 
    context. Thus, as we do in the program access context, we will apply 
    the definitions contained in the notes to 47 CFR Sec. 76.501 (which 
    reflect the broadcast attribution rules contained in the notes to 47 
    CFR Sec. 73.3555), with certain modifications. For instance, in 
    contrast to the broadcast attribution rules: (a) We will consider an 
    entity to be an open video system operator's ``affiliate'' if the open 
    video system operator holds 5% or more of the entity's stock, whether 
    voting or non-voting; (b) we will not adopt a single majority 
    shareholder exception; and (c) all limited partnership interests of 5% 
    or greater will qualify, regardless of insulation. Under the single 
    majority shareholder exception, where there is a single holder of more 
    than 50% of a corporation's outstanding voting stock, minority voting 
    stock interests in the corporation are not attributable to shareholders 
    irrespective of whether they exceed the 5% benchmark. See 47 CFR 
    Sec. 73.3555 note 2. In addition, as with both the program access 
    standard and the broadcast attribution rules, actual working control, 
    in whatever manner exercised, will also be deemed a cognizable 
    interest.
    
    III. Second Order on Reconsideration
    
    A. Qualifications to be an Open Video System Operator
    
        5. We decline to modify our decision in the Second Report and Order 
    to allow non-LECs to operate open video systems, and to allow cable 
    operators that are subject to effective competition in their cable 
    franchise areas to convert their cable systems to open video systems. 
    We disagree with Michigan Cities, et al. that our decision allowing 
    non-LECs to operate open video systems is inconsistent with the plain 
    language of the 1996 Act or the Act's legislative history. Permitting 
    non-LECs to become open video system operators is not only a 
    permissible reading of the statute, but is most consistent with 
    Congress' goal of opening all telecommunications markets to 
    competition. In addition, we disagree with the argument of the National 
    League of Cities, et al. that our decision to permit cable operators to 
    convert to open video may defeat the purposes of other Title VI 
    requirements that apply to cable operators. Congress established cable 
    and open video systems as two distinct video delivery models, each 
    offering a particular combination of regulatory benefits and burdens. 
    That an entity, by assuming the regulatory responsibilities of an open 
    video system, may be relieved of regulatory responsibilities relating 
    to cable is neither novel nor improper.
        6. While we believe that cable operators should be allowed to 
    operate open video systems, we also decline to alter our decision that 
    cable operators may do so in their existing cable franchise areas only 
    if they are subject to ``effective competition.'' The underlying 
    premise of Section 653 is that open video system operators would be new 
    entrants in established markets, competing directly with an incumbent 
    cable operator. We believe that Congress exempted open video system 
    operators from much of Title VI regulation because, in the vast 
    majority of cases, they will be competing with incumbent cable 
    operators for subscribers. Our effective competition restriction 
    implements Congress' intent by ensuring that, where it is the incumbent 
    cable operator itself that seeks to enter the marketplace as an open 
    video system operator, there is at least one other multichannel video 
    programming provider competing in the market.
        7. We are not convinced, as NCTA argues, that the potential 
    presence of multiple video programming providers on open video systems 
    obviates the need for an effective competition requirement. There is no 
    assurance that any particular system will generate sufficient 
    competition between providers of ``comparable'' video programming 
    services to qualify as a meaningful stand-in for effective facilities-
    based competition. While we agree with U S West that the expiration of 
    a franchise agreement may remove a contractual impediment to a cable 
    operator's conversion to an open video system, the public interest 
    rationale that gave rise to the effective competition restriction 
    remains. So long as a cable operator has the ability to exercise market 
    power--i.e., is not subject to effective competition--it has not met 
    the necessary pre-condition for operating an open video system.
        8. We also continue to disagree with Cox's argument that the 
    Commission has no authority to determine whether cable operators that 
    are also LECs may operate open video systems. The second sentence of 
    Section 653(a)(1) authorizes the Commission to determine whether any 
    cable operator may convert to open video, regardless of other services 
    it may also provide, including local exchange service. The Commission 
    retains its authority over cable operators that also become LECs 
    because, as Sprint notes, a cable operator does not lose its identity 
    as a cable operator simply by offering additional types of services.
    
    B. Certification Process
    
        9. The Second Report and Order fully explains our reasons for not 
    imposing pre-certification requirements regarding public rights-of-way, 
    PEG obligations, revisions to cost allocation manuals, or separate 
    subsidiaries. Petitioners have presented no new evidence or
    
    [[Page 43163]]
    
    arguments that would cause us to change our earlier conclusion.
        10. In addition, we will maintain our rule that certification 
    filings will be deemed approved unless disapproved by the Commission 
    within ten days. Petitioners have not demonstrated that affirmative 
    approval is necessary to provide notice to outside parties or to assure 
    adequate Commission review. Also, because certification precedes the 
    operator's actual implementation of the Commission's rules, we disagree 
    with NCTA that the Commission is required, at this stage of the 
    process, to do more than obtain adequate representations that the 
    applicant will comply with the Commission's requirements. Further, we 
    believe that any conflicts that arise regarding the operator's conduct 
    can be addressed more fully in the 180-day dispute resolution process 
    than in the ten-day certification process. Finally, we will not modify 
    our rule that, if new physical plant is required, open video system 
    operators must obtain Commission approval of their certification prior 
    to the commencement of construction.
        11. We do believe, however, that it is appropriate for a local 
    government to have a reasonable opportunity to respond to a 
    certification filing that implicates its community. We therefore will 
    revise FCC Form 1275, our proposed certification form, to require 
    applicants to list the names of the local communities in which they 
    intend to operate, rather than describe them generally. Because some 
    local communities may not have ready access to the Internet or to the 
    Commission's public notices, we will also require applicants for 
    certification to serve a copy of their FCC Form 1275 filing on the 
    clerk or other designated official of all affected local communities on 
    or before the date on which it is filed with the Commission. Service by 
    mail is complete upon mailing, but if mailed, the served documents must 
    be postmarked at least three days prior to the filing of the FCC Form 
    1275 with the Commission. Applicants also must inform the local 
    communities that any oppositions and comments must be filed with the 
    Commission within five days of an applicant's filing and must be served 
    on the applicant.
    
    C. Carriage of Video Programming Providers
    
        12. Notification and Enrollment of Video Programming Providers. We 
    fully considered the costs and benefits of requiring an open video 
    system operator to provide local notice of its intent to establish an 
    open video system. The Alliance for Community Media, et al. do not 
    provide additional evidence concerning these costs or benefits. We 
    reiterate our finding that dissemination of the Notice of Intent as 
    required under the Second Report and Order will be a sufficient means 
    for an entity to notify the public of its intention to establish an 
    open video system.
        13. Open Video System Operator Discretion Regarding Video 
    Programming Providers. We find that the Second Report and Order fully 
    considered most of the arguments and evidence raised on reconsideration 
    by NCTA and Cox, as described above. We explained in the Second Report 
    and Order that Section 653(a)(1) specifically permits the Commission, 
    ``consistent with the public interest, convenience and necessity'' to 
    determine when a cable operator may provide programming through an open 
    video system. We also fully explained our construction of Section 
    653(b)(1)(A), which gives the Commission the discretion to determine 
    when it is in the public interest, convenience and necessity for a 
    cable operator either to become an open video system operator or to 
    provide video programming over another entity's open video system. We 
    therefore deny the petitions of NCTA and Cox to the extent they raise 
    these particular contentions.
        14. We also reject the cable operators' argument concerning access 
    to open video systems by DBS and wireless service providers. The 1996 
    Act expressed a clear preference for facilities-based competition 
    between cable operators and telephone companies, and allowing an open 
    video system operator generally to limit the ability of a competing, 
    in-region cable operator to obtain capacity on its system would 
    encourage cable operators to develop and upgrade their own wireline 
    systems. Cable operators possess substantial market power, and because 
    these markets have been protected by high entry barriers, cable 
    operators have been able to maintain prices above the level that would 
    prevail if the market were competitive. Because of this market power, 
    cable operators may have different incentives for seeking open video 
    system capacity than would MVPDs that do not have such market power, 
    such as DBS and wireless cable providers. Enabling a cable operator to 
    obtain open video system capacity means that less capacity will be 
    available for use by the system operator and for other entities. The 
    open video system therefore could become a less attractive alternative 
    for consumers, which would help preserve the cable operator's market 
    power. We believe that these rationales currently do not apply to DBS 
    or wireless cable providers because these MVPDs do not enjoy 
    substantial market power. We therefore reaffirm our conclusion in the 
    Second Report and Order. However, at such time that DBS or wireless 
    cable providers possess sufficient market power to raise concerns 
    similar to those associated with existing in-region, competing cable 
    operators, we will reexamine this conclusion.
        15. We also disagree with NCTA's argument that the Commission 
    impermissibly delegated to open video system operators the discretion 
    to preclude cable operators from obtaining capacity on the system. In 
    determining that Section 653(a)(1) allows the Commission to determine 
    when a cable operator may access an open video system, we merely 
    interpreted the statute to allow the Commission to prescribe 
    regulations to govern this situation. We adopted regulations that set 
    forth the parameters for where a competing, in-region cable operator's 
    access to an open video system may be limited, and for where access may 
    not be limited. In any case, we will modify our regulations to 
    emphasize our decision that, pursuant to the second sentence of Section 
    653(a)(1), the public interest, convenience and necessity is served by 
    generally prohibiting a competing, in-region cable operator from 
    obtaining capacity on an open video system.
        16. There are two exceptions to this general rule. First, a 
    competing, in-region cable operator may access an open video system 
    when the open video system operator determines that it is in its 
    interests to grant access. Second, a competing, in-region cable 
    operator will be granted access to an open video system when such 
    access will not significantly impede facilities-based competition. As 
    previously determined, one situation in which facilities-based 
    competition will be deemed not to be significantly impeded is where: 
    (a) the competing, in-region cable operator and affiliated systems 
    offer service to less than 20% of the households passed by the open 
    video system; and (b) the competing, in-region cable operator and 
    affiliated systems provide cable service to a total of less than 17,000 
    subscribers within the open video system's service area.
        17. Allocation of Open Video System Channel Capacity. In the Second 
    Report and Order, we permitted an open video system operator to 
    implement its own method for allocating channel capacity to 
    unaffiliated video programming providers, so long as capacity is 
    allocated in an open, fair, non-discriminatory manner. We stated that
    
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    the process must be verifiable and insulated from any bias by the 
    system operator. NCTA's arguments were fully considered and addressed 
    in the Second Report and Order. NCTA offers no additional facts or 
    arguments to support their position. Accordingly, we decline to 
    reconsider our previous conclusion.
        18. Reallocation of Channel Capacity. In the Second Report and 
    Order, we required open video system operators to allocate open 
    capacity, if any is available, at least once every three years, stating 
    that requiring reallocation every three years will permit an open video 
    system operator to sufficiently accommodate subsequent requests for 
    carriage by video programming providers, while not causing unreasonable 
    disruption to the system. The Telephone Joint Petitioners do not 
    provide evidence that would compel the Commission to reconsider that 
    conclusion. We note in this regard that no new programming service, 
    which the Telephone Joint Petitioners assert would favor a longer 
    reallocation period, have filed for reconsideration in this proceeding.
        19. Channel Positioning. In the Second Report and Order, we 
    permitted an open video system operator to assign channel positions, 
    subject to Section 653's non-discrimination requirements. In the Second 
    Report and Order we determined that the statute and our implementing 
    regulations will prevent discrimination against unaffiliated video 
    programming providers, notwithstanding an open video system operator's 
    participation in the channel allocation process. The Alliance for 
    Community Media, et al. do not present new facts or arguments to 
    support the mandatory involvement of an independent entity. 
    Accordingly, we decline the Alliance for Community Media's request for 
    reconsideration.
        20. Channel Sharing. In response to the Alliance for Community 
    Media, et al.'s petition, we clarify that there is no requirement that 
    a system operator charge a video programming provider a pro-rata fee 
    because a programming service carried by that provider is placed on a 
    shared channel. Thus, even if a video programming provider's 
    programming service is placed on a shared channel, the video 
    programming provider may be required to pay the same rate as if the 
    programming service was placed on a non-shared channel. We think this 
    clarification addresses the Alliance for Community Media, et al.'s 
    concern that an open video system operator will engage in rate 
    discrimination by placing favored video programming providers' 
    programming services on shared channels. Second, ESPN argued that 
    channel sharing should be conditioned on the approval of programming 
    services in its reply comments to the NPRM. We fully considered those 
    views in the Second Report and Order, where we stated that so long as 
    each video programming provider has the contractual right to offer a 
    particular program service to subscribers, it is unnecessary for the 
    open video system operator to obtain the consent of the programming 
    service in order to place that service on a shared channel. Third, we 
    agree with NCTA that ad avails associated with a programming service 
    carried by both the open video system operator or its affiliated video 
    programming provider and an unaffiliated provider must be shared in an 
    equitable manner. Examples of acceptable methods of sharing ad avails 
    include apportioning the revenues from such ad avails on a per 
    subscriber basis or apportioning the rights to sell the avails 
    themselves. We will clarify that arrangements with regard to ad avails 
    will be considered a term or condition of carriage, and an open video 
    system operator must comply with Section 653(b)(1)(A) in negotiating 
    their apportionment.
        21. Open Video System Operator Co-Packaging of Video Programming 
    Selected by Unaffiliated Video Programming Providers. We decline to 
    adopt ESPN's proposal to require the consent of any programming 
    services involved before a video programming provider may enter into a 
    co-packaging agreement. We recognize ESPN's legitimate concerns that 
    its program license agreements frequently contain negotiated terms 
    related to the marketing of a programming service, including packaging 
    parameters and trademark use guidelines. However, these are contractual 
    matters that we believe are best left to the individual negotiations 
    between the parties involved. If a video programming provider enters 
    into a co-packaging arrangement that breaches its contractual 
    obligations, we believe that ESPN and other such programming services 
    already possess adequate remedies at law. Nothing in our rules should 
    be construed to infringe upon the rights of programming services with 
    respect to their program license obligations.
    
    D. Rates, Terms, and Conditions of Service
    
        22. Just and Reasonable Carriage Rates. In its petition, MCI has 
    provided no new facts or arguments to justify reconsideration of these 
    concerns in the instant proceeding. We also decline to impose the other 
    pre-certification and reporting requirements MCI seeks. We believe that 
    these requirements are inconsistent with our flexible regulatory 
    approach to the provision of open video system, and are not necessary 
    to protect either unaffiliated programmers or the public in general. In 
    addition, we decline to require open video system operators to base 
    their carriage rates on detailed studies of incremental and stand alone 
    cost and estimates of actual opportunity cost, as suggested by MCI, 
    because of the 1996 Act's direction that Title II requirements not be 
    applied to open video systems, and the limited time allowed for the 
    review of certifications and complaints. Instead, we reaffirm our 
    imputed rate approach for determining whether carriage rates are just 
    and reasonable where the presumption conditions are not present. We 
    also decline to adopt MCI's proposal to allow parties other than 
    potential video programming providers seeking carriage on the open 
    video system to file complaints with the Commission regarding the 
    carriage rates offered by the system operator. This decision does not 
    leave other parties who claim to be adversely affected by an open video 
    system operator's carriage rate without remedies. For example, a party 
    seeking to challenge a rate it pays for common carrier services 
    provided by that operator on the ground of improper cost-shifting from 
    an open video system, retains its rights under section 208 of the 
    Communications Act to file a complaint.
        23. We disagree with the general assertion by the National League 
    of Cities, et al. that our presumption conditions will not provide 
    adequate protection to unaffiliated video programming providers. The 
    National League of Cities et al. have presented no new arguments or 
    data to refute this conclusion. Moreover, we disagree with National 
    League of Cities et al.'s contention that the presumption approach 
    places an undue financial and regulatory burden on the unaffiliated 
    programmer to determine whether the operators' rates are fair. Our 
    presumption approach strikes an appropriate balance between the 
    interests of the open video system operator in establishing service to 
    end users quickly, without undue regulatory intervention by 
    competitors, and the interests of unaffiliated programmers in obtaining 
    just and reasonable carriage rates. The National League of Cities, et 
    al. also expressed the specific concern that the presumption conditions 
    will allow the average rate paid by the unaffiliated programming 
    providers receiving carriage to be ``weighted'' or
    
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    adjusted, but that only the open video system operator will possess the 
    information necessary to calculate the average or to ``weight'' the 
    average. We clarify that, as part of its burden of showing that the 
    presumption conditions are met, an open video system operator will be 
    required to make available to a complainant all information needed to 
    calculate the average rate paid by the unaffiliated programming 
    providers receiving carriage on its system, including the information 
    needed for any weighting of the individual carriage rates that the 
    operator has included in the average rate. The complainant may 
    challenge the weighting methodology used by the open video system 
    operator as part of its case.
        24. In response to the Telephone Joint Petitioners' request, we 
    clarify that in the Second Report and Order, the phrase ``unaffiliated 
    programmers as a group'' does not impose a requirement that the 
    programmers market their programming in competition with the operator. 
    Rather, the phrase is used to give open video system operators greater 
    flexibility in meeting the presumption conditions. It allows operators 
    to meet the requirement by providing carriage to several unaffiliated 
    programmers that in total occupy the threshold capacity requirement.
        25. We reaffirm our basic imputed rate approach for ensuring just 
    and reasonable open video system carriage rates where the presumption 
    conditions are not met, but clarify our use of certain terminology. We 
    structured the imputed rate in the Second Report and Order to reflect 
    what the open video system operator, or its affiliate, effectively 
    ``pays'' for its own carriage of programming over the system by 
    starting with the revenues received from the end user subscriber, and 
    subtracting the costs avoided by the open video system operator by 
    permitting another programming provider to serve that subscriber. No 
    petitioner has convinced us that an imputed rate approach is not 
    suitable to the circumstances of open video system carriage, where a 
    new market entrant (the open video system operator) will, in the 
    majority of areas, face competition from an established incumbent (the 
    cable operator).
        26. As we noted in the Second Report and Order, open video systems 
    are essentially a combination of: (a) the creative development and 
    production of programming, (b) the packaging of various programs for 
    the open video system operator's offering, and (c) the creation and 
    maintenance of infrastructure for the carriage of both the operator's 
    affiliated programming and unaffiliated programming. Our rules are 
    intended to ensure that unaffiliated programming providers pay a rate 
    for carriage that is no more than the carriage price that can be fairly 
    imputed for the carriage of the operator's affiliated programming 
    packages. In so doing we seek to attain an important result of the 
    ECPR, which is that the price the operator charges unaffiliated 
    programming providers for carriage must be no higher than the sum of 
    its incremental cost of carriage and the contribution to fixed 
    infrastructure costs in its retail price of programming.
        27. We disagree with the assertion by the Telephone Joint 
    Petitioners that the Commission errs by using an ECPR methodology to 
    establish carriage pricing on open video systems, where it is not 
    appropriate, while declining to use ECPR to establish LEC 
    interconnection pricing in situations where they assert it is 
    appropriate. Like ECPR, our imputed rate approach will provide the open 
    video system operator the same return when it carries unaffiliated 
    programming as when it carries its own programming. We believe that in 
    the case of open video systems, application of an ECPR methodology 
    provides full economic incentives for LEC entry into video in 
    competition with incumbent cable providers.
        28. We disagree also with the assertion by the Telephone Joint 
    Petitioners that the imputed price omits the incremental cost of 
    carriage. Under normal market conditions, the imputed price of carriage 
    will exceed the open video system operator's incremental cost of 
    carriage (which is greater than zero) and make a contribution to the 
    fixed infrastructure cost of the open video system. For this reason, we 
    reject the Telephone Joint Petitioners' assertion that the imputed rate 
    approach will produce a carriage rate of zero or less. The imputed rate 
    is based in part on the price charged by the open video system operator 
    or its affiliate to end-user subscribers. The price charged the 
    subscriber will generally be greater than the incremental cost of 
    carriage. In addition, the imputed rate subtracts out the costs of 
    developing the programming and creating the package, which removes the 
    costs avoided when unaffiliated programming is carried. After 
    subtracting these costs, the imputed rate will correspond to the 
    carriage rate that the open video system operator ``pays'' to carry its 
    own programming. The imputed rate approach is designed to give the open 
    video system operator the same economic return when it sells carriage 
    to unaffiliated programming providers as when it ``sells'' carriage to 
    its own programming. Consequently, we would expect the use of the ECPR 
    approach to minimize any disincentives the open video system operator 
    may have to carry unaffiliated programming.
        29. We believe that this result of the imputed rate approach should 
    be achieved even under the competitive conditions assumed by the 
    Telephone Joint Petitioners in their petition. Even assuming that, at 
    the outset of open video system operations, competition lowered the 
    retail price of video programming to subscribers to the point that the 
    open video system operator incurred losses, this would not justify the 
    operator's shifting the burden of such losses to unaffiliated video 
    programming providers by charging them a higher carriage rate than the 
    rate that it effectively ``charges'' itself. The unaffiliated 
    programming providers would also face lower retail prices for their 
    programming under the competitive conditions assumed by the Telephone 
    Joint Petitioners. We disagree with the Telephone Joint Petitioners' 
    assertion that unaffiliated programmers would be largely unaffected by 
    retail price competition.
        30. The imputed rate approach was chosen as a flexible regulatory 
    approach for determining what are just and reasonable carriage rates in 
    an imperfectly competitive carriage market. However, it may not be the 
    sole means of establishing just and reasonable carriage rates. There 
    may be alternative, market-based approaches to demonstrating that a 
    challenged rate is just and reasonable, that may also be useful in 
    particular cases. We would consider such an argument in response to a 
    complaint regarding a carriage rate. The open video system operator 
    would be required to demonstrate that its carriage service is subject 
    to sufficiently strong competitive forces to ensure that its carriage 
    rates are just and reasonable, or that it has computed its rate using a 
    methodology that aims to produce or replicate the working of a 
    competitive carriage market.
        31. In addition, on reconsideration, we find that certain aspects 
    of our explanation and use of terminology should be clarified. As we 
    stated above, under our approach, the imputed price of carriage for an 
    affiliated programming package equals the price of the package 
    delivered to a subscriber minus the cost of creating the package. To 
    clarify the terms identified by the Telephone Joint Petitioners, in the 
    Second Report and Order we use the term ``earning'' to refer to the 
    difference between the price of the package delivered to a subscriber 
    and the cost of creating the package. We
    
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    use the term ``profit allowance'' to refer to one type of cost of 
    creating the programming package, namely the cost of capital used to 
    create the package. We also clarify Section 76.1504 of the rules to 
    indicate more clearly the types of avoided costs that must be 
    subtracted by an open video system operator in calculating the imputed 
    rate.
        32. We also clarify in response to the National League of Cities, 
    et al. that the imputed rate formula will not allow open video system 
    operators to charge unaffiliated programming providers a price for 
    carriage equal to the price they charge subscribers for affiliated 
    programming. The imputed rate formula, as we have discussed, requires 
    open video system operators to subtract the cost of creating affiliated 
    programming from the price of the programming. The carriage rate that 
    unaffiliated programming providers pay will be less than the price 
    subscribers pay for affiliated programming.
        33. Open Video System Carriage Rates Must Not be Unjustly or 
    Unreasonably Discriminatory. The petitioners' concerns about whether 
    open video system rates are nondiscriminatory ignores the wording of 
    the 1996 Act, which prohibits rate differences only when unjust or 
    unreasonable. As we noted in the Second Report and Order, we decided to 
    permit carriage rate differentiation because requiring open video 
    system operators to charge all programming providers the same carriage 
    rate would exclude providers whose programming has a low market value. 
    Neither NCTA nor MCI has offered new factual or legal arguments to 
    refute this reasoning.
        34. We disagree with the Alliance for Community Media, et al., that 
    open video system operators should be required to charge reduced 
    carriage rates to non-profit programming providers. In the Second 
    Report and Order, we identified not-for-profit status as one of the 
    legitimate, objective factors on which open video system operators 
    could base reduced rates. Moreover, we are concerned about the impact 
    of mandatory reduced carriage rates on a new entrant in the markets for 
    video carriage and distribution. Our decision to allow preferred 
    carriage rates for non-profit programmers on a voluntary basis reflects 
    our goals of promoting open video system entry and competition with 
    incumbent cable systems, while providing access to carriage by 
    unaffiliated programming providers.
    
    E. Gross Revenues Fee
    
        35. We generally reaffirm our conclusions in the Second Report and 
    Order. We continue to believe that our interpretation represents the 
    best reading of Section 653(c)(2)(B). We will, however, clarify our 
    rule to make clear our intent that local governments have the authority 
    to charge and receive the gross revenue fee. In addition, consistent 
    with Congress' intent of ensuring ``parity among video providers,'' we 
    will clarify that any advertising revenues received by an open video 
    system operator or its affiliates in connection with the provision of 
    video programming should be included in the fee calculation, where such 
    revenues are included in the incumbent cable operator's franchise fee 
    calculation.
        36. We agree with NYNEX and U S West that the application of the 
    gross revenues fee provision should not disadvantage any particular 
    video programming provider. Like the costs of PEG and must-carry, we 
    believe that the gross revenues fee is a cost of the platform--in this 
    case, the cost of using the rights-of-way--that should be shared 
    equitably among all users of the system. We therefore will permit open 
    video system operators to recover the gross revenues fee from all video 
    programming providers on a proportional basis as an element of the 
    carriage rate.
    
    F. Applicability of Title VI Provisions
    
        37. Public, Educational and Governmental Access Channels. We 
    continue to believe that open video system operators should in the 
    first instance be permitted to negotiate their PEG access obligations 
    with the relevant local franchising authority and, if the parties so 
    desire, the local cable operator. Furthermore, we continue to believe 
    that it is necessary to have a default mechanism in case the open video 
    system operator and the local franchising authority are unable to 
    agree. We disagree with Comcast that open video system operators should 
    be required to negotiate with local franchising authorities. Providing 
    a ``backstop'' is an appropriate balance between imposing Section 611's 
    requirements and not imposing franchise requirements on open video 
    systems. If the open video system operator matches the PEG access 
    obligations of the cable operator, the actual PEG access obligations 
    imposed on the open video system operator will be, as the statute 
    requires, to the extent possible no greater or lesser than those 
    imposed on the cable operator. This is true even if the open video 
    system operator's obligations are established through our default 
    mechanism and the cable operator's obligations are established through 
    negotiation and the franchise process.
        38. After considering the arguments made by the various 
    petitioners, we believe, however, that some modification of our rule 
    regarding how to establish open video system PEG access obligations is 
    appropriate. We believe that imposing Section 611 obligations on open 
    video system operators so that to the extent possible the obligations 
    are ``no greater or lesser'' than those imposed on cable operators 
    means that, in the absence of an agreement with the local franchising 
    authority, an open video system operator must match, rather than share, 
    the annual PEG access financial contributions of the local cable 
    operator. Under our current rule, open video system operators are 
    required to match the PEG access channel capacity provided by the local 
    cable operator, but are required to share the contributions towards PEG 
    access services, facilities and equipment. Our modified rule will apply 
    the matching principle which we have applied to channel capacity also 
    to PEG contributions that cable operators make, and that are actually 
    used for PEG access services, facilities and equipment.
        39. For in-kind contributions (e.g., cameras, production studios), 
    we believe that precise duplication would often be unnecessary, 
    wasteful and inappropriate. Instead, open video system operators may 
    work out mutually agreeable terms with cable operators over in-kind 
    equipment, studios and the like so that PEG service to the community is 
    improved or increased and the open video system operator fulfills its 
    statutory obligation. As a backstop, however, we will permit the open 
    video system operator to pay the local franchising authority the 
    monetary equivalent of the depreciated in-kind contribution, or in the 
    case of facilities, the annual amortization value. Any matching PEG 
    access contributions provided by an open video system operator are to 
    be used by the local franchising authority to fund activities arising 
    under Section 611.
        40. We decline to modify our rule that requires the local cable 
    operator to permit the open video system operator to connect with the 
    cable operator's PEG access channel feed. We clarify, however, that any 
    costs associated with the open video system operator's connection to 
    the cable operator's PEG access channel feed shall be borne by the open 
    video system operator. These costs shall be counted towards the open 
    video system operator's matching obligation described above. We are not 
    requiring the local cable operator to
    
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    permit others to interconnect with and use their cable system to reach 
    consumers. Rather, we are simply requiring the local cable operator to 
    provide its PEG access channel feed to a particular competitor that 
    shares a similar PEG access obligation in order to avoid an unnecessary 
    duplication of facilities and promote Congress' goal of competitive 
    entry.
        41. In response to the request of Municipal Services, et al., we 
    clarify that the negotiated PEG access obligations of an open video 
    system operator may be enforced regardless of where and when the 
    agreement is made. Regarding City of Indianapolis's assertion that 
    channel alignment should not be at the discretion of the open video 
    system, we affirm our decision in the Second Report and Order that 
    there is insufficient evidence to support mandating that PEG access 
    channels be carried at the same channel location on the open video 
    system operator as on the cable system. City of Indianapolis has 
    presented no new evidence or argument not presented to the Commission 
    before.
        42. Establishing Open Video System PEG Access Obligations Where No 
    Local Cable Operator Exists. Our discussion in the Second Report and 
    Order regarding the establishment of open video system PEG access 
    obligations where no local cable operator exists was not intended to 
    foreclose a local franchising authority from negotiating with the open 
    video system operator. The discussion was intended to explain how to 
    establish open video system PEG access obligations where no local cable 
    operator exists and the local franchising authority and the open video 
    system operator cannot agree. The parties are therefore free to 
    negotiate PEG access obligations as Alliance for Community, et al. 
    request. However, if the open video system operator and the local 
    franchising authority cannot agree, the operator must make a reasonable 
    amount of channel capacity available for PEG use. In the Second Report 
    and Order, we found that where a cable franchise previously existed, 
    such as where a cable system is able to convert to an open video 
    system, what constitutes a reasonable amount of channel capacity is to 
    be governed by the previously existing franchise agreement with respect 
    to PEG access obligations.
        43. While we do not believe that Congress intended open video 
    system PEG access obligations to correct deficiencies in what the local 
    franchising authority negotiated for cable operator PEG access 
    obligations, we also recognize the concern that PEG access requirements 
    should not be frozen in time in perpetuity. We will therefore modify 
    our approach for a situation in which there was a previously existing 
    cable franchise, such as where a cable system converts to an open video 
    system, and provide that, when the open video system operator and the 
    local franchising authority cannot agree on PEG access obligations, the 
    local franchising authority may either keep the previously existing PEG 
    access obligations or may elect to have the open video system 
    operator's PEG access obligations determined by comparison to the 
    franchise agreement for the nearest operating cable system that has a 
    commitment to provide PEG access and that serves a franchise area with 
    a similar population size. The local franchising authority shall be 
    permitted to make a similar election every 15 years thereafter.
        44. Open Video System PEG Obligations Where System Overlaps with 
    More than One Franchise Area. While we do not disagree with Telephone 
    Joint Petitioners that open video systems may be configured differently 
    from cable systems, as Alliance for Community Media, et al. point out, 
    Telephone Joint Petitioners provide insufficient support for why open 
    video systems will not be able to be configured to comply with the PEG 
    access obligations for each franchise area with which each system 
    overlaps. In fact, Michigan Cities, et al. demonstrate that, in at 
    least one situation, it is indeed possible. We therefore deny Telephone 
    Joint Petitioners' petition with respect to this matter.
        45. Institutional Networks. We affirm our decision to preclude 
    local franchising authorities from requiring open video system 
    operators to build institutional networks because the cable operator is 
    required to do so under the terms of its franchise agreement. Because 
    there is confusion over our interpretation of Section 611 as it applies 
    to institutional networks, however, we make the following 
    clarifications. Contrary to the understanding of certain petitioners, 
    we agree that institutional networks may be required of a cable 
    operator, but we do not agree that this requirement is found in Section 
    611. Section 611 only provides that a local franchising authority may 
    require that channel capacity on institutional networks be designated 
    for educational or governmental use and does not authorize local 
    franchising authorities to require cable operators to build 
    institutional networks. The building of an institutional network is a 
    requirement negotiated in the franchise agreement. Section 
    621(b)(3)(D), as added by the 1996 Act, makes clear that a local 
    franchising authority may require a cable operator to provide 
    institutional networks as a condition of the initial grant, renewal or 
    transfer of a franchise. Pursuant to Section 653(c)(1)(C), open video 
    system operators are not subject to franchise requirements, so we 
    cannot apply an institutional network requirement to open video 
    systems.
        46. While institutional networks may or may not function like PEG 
    access as National League of Cities, et al. assert, the statutory 
    definition is broader than merely PEG use. We do not agree that 
    precluding the local franchising authority from requiring an open video 
    system operator to build an institutional network, but permitting the 
    local franchising authority to require channel capacity on a network if 
    an open video system operator does build one, is inconsistent, as 
    Michigan Cities, et al. suggest. Rather, once an open video system 
    operator decides to build an institutional network, the 1996 Act's 
    mandate that an open video system operator's PEG access obligations be 
    no greater or lesser than those of the cable operator become operative.
        47. Must-Carry and Retransmission Consent. In the Second Report and 
    Order, the Commission considered and rejected suggestions similar to 
    NCTA's that we specifically require the use of a basic tier-type 
    arrangement in order to provide all subscribers on a system with the 
    signals carried in fulfillment of the must-carry requirements. As we 
    noted in the Second Report and Order, the basic tier requirement is 
    contained in Section 623 of the Communications Act, which does not 
    apply to open video systems. NCTA has presented no new evidence in 
    support of a basic tier requirement. We therefore decline to adopt 
    NCTA's request. We agree with NCTA, however, that video programming 
    providers should not be required to duplicate must-carry programming 
    already provided to subscribers from another source.
        48. The Commission recognizes ALTV's valid concern that stations 
    electing must-carry status will have to reimburse open video system 
    operators for extensive copyright fees that may result from carriage 
    beyond their local market areas. As ALTV notes, these dangers may be 
    avoided if open video system operators tailor the distribution of must-
    carry signals to the parts of their system that are located within a 
    station's local market. We believe that our rules provide open video 
    system operators with an incentive to design
    
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    and construct their systems with this capability. Where an open video 
    system has such a capability, we will require open video system 
    operators to limit the distribution of must-carry signals to the 
    appropriate local markets, unless a local broadcast station consents 
    otherwise. If an open video system operator cannot limit its 
    distribution of must-carry signals in this manner, the open video 
    system operator will be responsible for any increase in copyright fees 
    and may not pass through such increases to the local station electing 
    must-carry treatment.
        49. Finally, we agree with Tele-TV and U S West that we should 
    amend our current rule that allows broadcasters to make different 
    elections among open video systems and cable systems serving the same 
    geographic area. The ``common election'' requirement is contained in 
    Section 325(b)(3)(B): ``If there is more than one cable system which 
    services the same geographic area, a station's election shall apply to 
    all such cable systems.'' In Section 653(c), Congress provided that 
    Section 325 should apply to open video system operators, to the extent 
    possible, no greater or lesser than it applies to cable operators. By 
    directing equal treatment under Section 325, we believe that Congress 
    intended to remove Section 325 as a distinguishing factor between those 
    entering the video marketplace as a cable operator and those entering 
    as an open video operator. In the Second Report and Order, however, we 
    found that as a practical matter the potential size differences between 
    open video systems and cable systems could make common election on 
    overlapping cable and open video systems infeasible. We agree with 
    Tele-TV that our concern in the Second Report and Order may no longer 
    apply to the extent that an open video system can tailor the 
    distribution of local broadcast stations to the appropriate 
    communities. We will therefore amend our rules to require that 
    broadcasters make the same election for open video systems and cable 
    systems serving the same geographic area unless the overlapping open 
    video system is unable to deliver appropriate signals in conformance 
    with the broadcast station's elections for all cable systems serving 
    the same geographic area.
        50. Program Access. We believe that our initial interpretation 
    applying the provisions of Section 628 to open video system programming 
    providers is reasonable and should stand. Rainbow and NCTA's argument 
    that Congress limited the applicability of the program access rules to 
    open video system operators was expressly considered and rejected in 
    the Second Report and Order.
        51. As we stated in the Second Report and Order, an exclusive 
    contract between a cable-affiliated video programming provider on an 
    open video system and a cable-affiliated programmer presents many of 
    the same concerns as an exclusive contract between a cable operator and 
    a vertically integrated satellite programming vendor. A primary 
    objective of the program access requirements is the release of 
    programming to existing or potential competitors of traditional cable 
    systems so that the public may benefit from the development of 
    competitive distributors. Exclusive arrangements among cable-affiliated 
    open video system programming providers and cable-affiliated satellite 
    programmers may impede the development of open video systems as a 
    viable competitor to cable. NCTA and Rainbow fail to challenge or 
    address these concerns.
        52. Second, we believe that the benefits of the program access 
    provisions apply to open video system providers. Contrary to Rainbow's 
    arguments, open video system programming providers fall within the 
    definition of MVPDs, which Section 628 identified as the intended 
    beneficiaries of the program access regime. We believe that Section 
    602(13)'s list of entities enumerated in that section is expressly a 
    non-exclusive list. Section 602(13) states that the term MVPD ``means a 
    person such as, but not limited to, a cable operator, a multichannel 
    multipoint distribution service, a direct broadcast satellite service. 
    * * * `` We also agree with those commenters that asserted that open 
    video system video programming providers fit the definition of MVPD 
    because they make ``available for purchase, by subscribers or 
    customers, multiple channels of video programming.
        53. Third, we reject NCTA's argument that intra-system competition 
    would be harmed by applying the program access rules to cable-
    affiliated video programming providers on an open video system. Our 
    concern is the same as in the cable context--that a cable operator 
    would use its control over programming to keep that programming from 
    other competing MVPDs. We are concerned that exclusive arrangements 
    among cable-affiliated open video system programming providers and 
    cable-affiliated satellite programmers may serve to impede development 
    of open video systems as a viable competitor to cable to the extent 
    that popular programming services are denied to open video system 
    operators or unaffiliated open video system programming providers that 
    seek to package such programming for distribution to subscribers.
        54. We reiterate that the prohibition, absent a Commission public 
    interest finding, on exclusive contracts applies only to contracts 
    between cable-affiliated satellite programmers and cable-affiliated 
    open video system programming providers and contracts between satellite 
    programmers affiliated with an open video system operator and open 
    video system programming providers affiliated with an open video system 
    operator. We note that a vertically integrated satellite programmer is 
    not generally restricted from entering into an exclusive contract with 
    an MVPD that is not affiliated with a cable operator, although such a 
    contract is subject to challenge under Section 628(b) of the 
    Communications Act and Section 76.1001 of the Commission's rules.
        55. Sports Exclusivity, Network Non-Duplication and Syndicated 
    Exclusivity. Upon reconsideration, we grant the petition filed by the 
    Joint Sports Petitioners regarding our current rule governing sports 
    exclusivity. We find merit in their position that, unlike network non-
    duplication and syndicated exclusivity, sports exclusivity requires 
    infrequent deletions that cannot be recouped once missed. We believe 
    that our rule that extends the Commission's regulations concerning 
    sports exclusivity to open video systems must be amended in order to 
    preserve the same level of protection received by sports teams and 
    leagues in the cable context. While we hold open video system operators 
    responsible for compliance with our rules, we also recognize that they 
    are forced by the structure of an open video system to rely, to a 
    degree, on individual programming providers who may dispute a claim of 
    exclusivity or may attempt to substitute a signal for the signal that 
    is to be deleted. We amend our rule to provide that open video system 
    operators will be subject to sanctions for any violation of our sports 
    exclusivity rules. Operators generally may effect the deletion of 
    signals for which they receive deletion notices unless they receive 
    notice within a reasonable time from the appropriate programming 
    provider that the rights claimed are invalid. If a programmer 
    challenges the validity of claimed exclusive or non-duplication rights, 
    the open video system operator shall not delete the signal. However, an 
    open video system operator should be allowed to require indemnification 
    as a
    
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    condition of carriage for any sanctions it may incur in reliance on a 
    programmer's claim that certain exclusive or non-duplication rights are 
    invalid.
        56. Contrary to the further concerns mentioned by the Joint Sports 
    Petitioners, our current rules do not require a sports team or league 
    to provide notifications to individual video programming providers in 
    addition to the open video system operator. The holder of exclusive or 
    non-duplication rights is, of course, free to notify individual 
    programming providers when it notifies the open video system operator 
    as required by our rules. In addition, our rules require an open video 
    system operator to make the notices it receives ``immediately 
    available'' to the appropriate programming providers on its system. 
    Given the different types of systems and different circumstances in 
    which notice will be provided, we do not believe at this time that a 
    specific time requirement is necessary or appropriate.
        57. We also deny U S West's petition for reconsideration which 
    suggests that the Commission hold individual programming providers 
    responsible for compliance with our exclusivity and non-duplication 
    rules, and asks the Commission to further define the ``prompt steps'' 
    that must be taken by an operator in order to avoid liability after a 
    violation of our rules has occurred. In the Second Report and Order, 
    the Commission responded to the issues raised in U S West's petition. U 
    S West does not present any further evidence to support the adoption of 
    different rules.
        58. Local Franchising Requirements. We thoroughly explained the 
    bases of our findings in the Second Report and Order on these issues. 
    No parties on reconsideration raise any arguments that lead us to 
    revisit our conclusions therein. We continue to believe that the 
    general distinction we adopted reflects Congress' stated intent: state 
    and local authorities may manage the public rights-of-way in a non-
    discriminatory and competitively neutral manner, but may not impose 
    Title VI franchise or Title VI ``franchise-like'' requirements on open 
    video system operators.
        59. We do, however, clarify our decision in several respects. 
    First, we clarify that the preemption is limited to Title VI or Title 
    VI ``franchise-like'' requirements, and does not extend to all types of 
    potential franchises. If, for example, a state or local government 
    characterizes permission to use the public rights-of-way as a 
    ``franchise,'' such franchises are not preempted so long as they are 
    issued in a non-discriminatory and competitively neutral manner. We 
    agree with U S West that the key in this regard is not how such 
    requirements are labeled, but their effect. If the local requirements 
    are Title VI-like requirements that would frustrate Congress' intent in 
    adopting the 1996 Act's open video provisions, we continue to believe 
    they are preempted.
        60. Second, we clarify that ``non-discriminatory and competitively 
    neutral'' treatment does not necessarily mean ``equal'' treatment. For 
    instance, it could be a non-discriminatory and competitively neutral 
    regulation for a state or local authority to impose higher insurance 
    requirements based on the number of street cuts an entity planned to 
    make, even though such a regulation would not treat all entities 
    ``equally.'' Third, we clarify that when the Second Report and Order 
    stated that local authorities may ensure the public safety in the use 
    of rights-of-way by ``gas, telephone, electric, cable and similar 
    companies,'' an open video system would qualify as a ``similar 
    company.''
        61. We continue to disagree with the National League of Cities, et 
    al. that the narrow preemption in the Second Report and Order violates 
    the Fifth Amendment. First, although the National League of Cities, et 
    al. assert that the Second Report and Order ``grossly underestimates'' 
    the compensation due to local authorities, they fail to address the 
    Commission's finding that the ``before and after'' test--in which the 
    measure of compensation is the difference in the value of the property 
    before a partial taking and the value of the property after the partial 
    taking--is the proper test to apply. Second, we do not agree with the 
    National League of Cities, et al. that the local community has not 
    received just compensation unless an open video system operator matches 
    the franchise and other obligations imposed upon the incumbent cable 
    operator. Such a requirement would obviously render meaningless 
    Congress' exemption of open video from Section 621 franchising 
    requirements, since an open video system operator would be forced to 
    comply with each of the incumbent cable operator's franchise terms or 
    be subject to a Fifth Amendment ``takings'' claim. Third, the Second 
    Report and Order specifically permits the recovery of normal fees 
    associated with the construction of an open video system: ``[A] state 
    or local government could impose normal fees associated with zoning and 
    construction of an open video system, so long as such fees [are] 
    applied in a non-discriminatory and competitively neutral manner.'' We 
    clarify, however, that these ``normal fees associated with zoning and 
    construction'' should not duplicate the compensation provided by the 
    gross revenues fee. As we stated in the Second Report and Order, it is 
    apparent that the gross revenue fee ``in lieu of'' a franchise fee was 
    intended as compensation by open video system operators for use of the 
    public rights-of-way. The National League of Cities, et al. have not 
    explained why the fees associated with the construction of open video 
    systems would be any different than the fees associated with any other 
    users of the rights-of-way, and why regulations applied in a non-
    discriminatory, competitively neutral manner on all users of the 
    rights-of-way would be insufficient to deal with such matters.
        62. Finally, we find that a determination of whether LECs that use 
    the rights-of-way for open video service remain subject to the same 
    conditions contained in the pre-existing telephone franchise agreements 
    can only be made on a case-by-case basis in light of the particular 
    agreement between the parties. Thus, we make no general conclusions 
    here.
    
    G. Information Provided to Subscriber
    
        63. On reconsideration, we agree that video programming providers, 
    including those affiliated with the open video system operator, should 
    be permitted to develop and use their own navigational devices. We 
    agree with Tele-TV and NYNEX that individualized navigational devices 
    could be a factor in subscribers' choice of programming providers, 
    thereby fostering innovation and competition among providers. While for 
    technical considerations we will not require open video system 
    operators to permit programming providers to use their own navigational 
    devices, we do not believe that the same limitation should be placed on 
    a provider's right to develop and use their own individualized guides 
    and menus. We believe that it would be an impermissible term or 
    condition of carriage under Section 653(b)(1) for an open video system 
    operator to restrict a video programming provider's ability to use part 
    of its channel capacity to provide an individualized guide or menu to 
    its subscribers.
        64. We believe that several safeguards are necessary to effectuate 
    congressional intent and protect unaffiliated programming providers. 
    First, we reaffirm our conclusion in the Second Report and Order that 
    an open video system operator cannot evade its non-discrimination 
    obligations under Section 653(b)(1)(E) simply by having its 
    navigational devices, guides, or
    
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    menus nominally provided by an affiliate. By this statement, we meant 
    that where an open video system operator provides no navigational 
    device, guide or menu of its own, its affiliate's navigational device, 
    guide or menu will be subject to the requirements of Section 
    653(b)(1)(E) even though such services are not formally provided by the 
    open video system operator. We therefore will continue to apply the 
    non-discrimination requirements of Section 653(b)(1)(E) to the open 
    video system operator's affiliate where the affiliate provides a 
    navigational device, guide or menu and the operator does not.
        65. Second, if an open video system operator permits video 
    programming providers, including its affiliate, to develop and use 
    their own navigational devices, the operator must create an electronic 
    menu or guide that all video programming providers must carry 
    containing a non-discriminatory listing of programming providers or 
    programming services available on the system. These menus or guides 
    should also inform the viewer how to obtain additional information on 
    each of the services listed. If an operator provides a system-wide menu 
    or guide that meets these requirements, its programming affiliate may 
    create its own menu or guide without being subject to the requirements 
    of Section 653(b)(1)(E).
        66. Third, an open video system operator may not require 
    programming providers to develop and/or use their own navigational 
    devices. Upon request, such programming providers must have access to 
    the navigational device used by the open video system operator or its 
    affiliate. Thus, for example, an open video system operator may not 
    require a subscriber of its affiliated programming package to purchase 
    a second set-top box in order to receive service from an unaffiliated 
    programming provider that does not wish to use its own set-top box. An 
    open video system operator need not physically integrate such 
    programming providers into its affiliated programming package, or list 
    such programming providers on its affiliate's guide or menu, so long as 
    it meets the requirement set forth in the Second Report and Order that 
    no programming service on its navigational device be more difficult to 
    select than any other programming service.
    
    H. Dispute Resolution
    
        67. We disagree with the Alliance for Community Media, et al. that 
    not mandating public disclosure and filing of carriage contracts will 
    result in economic inefficiency. Economic efficiency is promoted by 
    increased competition. Open video system operators generally will be 
    new entrants into markets that, although characterized by a degree of 
    competition, have relatively few sellers of channel capacity over which 
    video programming may be offered to subscribers. In such markets, 
    increased competition is promoted when sellers of capacity, such as 
    open video system operators, can negotiate contracts privately with 
    individual buyers (i.e., video programming providers), and rival 
    sellers cannot immediately match the contracts' terms and conditions. 
    Thus, our rules are designed to increase economic efficiency by 
    promoting competition in video programming carriage markets.
        68. We believe that the National League of Cities, et al. raise 
    valid concerns that would-be complainants may lack sufficient 
    information to file a complaint under our pleading rules. We believe it 
    appropriate to give unaffiliated programming providers seeking carriage 
    on open video systems some access to other programmer's carriage rates 
    under certain circumstances. To ensure that the open video system 
    operator provides useful information to the would-be complainant, we 
    clarify that the preliminary rate estimates must include, upon request, 
    all information needed to calculate the average rate paid by the 
    unaffiliated programmers receiving carriage on the system, including 
    the information needed for any weighting of the individual carriage 
    rates that the operator has included in the average rate. This 
    information may be made available subject to a reasonable non-
    disclosure agreement. In addition, we reiterate that the operator's 
    carriage contracts may be subject to discovery as part of the complaint 
    procedure.
    
    I. Joint Marketing, Bundling and Structural Separation
    
        69. Joint Marketing. We again decline to adopt NCTA's proposed 
    restriction on joint marketing. While we agree that Congress' silence 
    is not determinative, in light of Congress' silence on the issue, we 
    believe that the burden is on those proposing joint marketing 
    restrictions to demonstrate that such restrictions are necessary. NCTA 
    requests that open video system operators be required to inform 
    incoming callers that other video service providers exist in the area. 
    To justify such a requirement, NCTA, at a minimum, would have to make 
    some showing that consumers otherwise would likely be unaware of the 
    existence of other video service options, such as cable service. NCTA 
    made no such showing in its initial comments and has presented no new 
    evidence here. In the absence of record evidence, the Commission 
    declines to find that consumers would be unaware of the existence of 
    other video providers such as cable, especially since cable currently 
    accounts for 91% of multichannel video programming subscribers 
    nationally, and passes 96% of all television households. NCTA's 
    petition is denied.
        70. Bundling. AT&T and NCTA's concerns were considered and 
    addressed in the Second Report and Order. They adduce no new evidence 
    here, nor have they explained why the safeguards adopted by the 
    Commission are inadequate to protect consumers' interests. The 
    petitions for reconsideration are denied. On our own motion, we will 
    correct a typographical error in our rule regarding the bundling of 
    video and local exchange services. The current text provides, in part, 
    that any local exchange carrier offering a bundled package must impute 
    the unbundled tariff rate for the ``unregulated service.'' The rule 
    will be corrected to be consistent with the text of the Second Report 
    and Order, which states that a bundled package must impute the 
    unbundled tariff rate for the ``regulated service.''
        71. Structural Separation. We deny the motions of NCTA and the 
    Alliance for Community Media, et al. to reconsider our decision in the 
    Second Report and Order, and accordingly decline to impose a separate 
    affiliate requirement. First, while both NCTA and the Alliance for 
    Community Media, et al. point out that the Commission need not be 
    restricted by congressional silence, they both fail to address the 
    point raised in the Second Report and Order that Congress expressly 
    directed in Section 653 that Title II requirements not be applied to 
    ``the establishment and operation of an open video system.'' In 
    addition, as we stated in the Second Report and Order, we believe that 
    the Commission's Part 64 cost allocation rules and any amendment 
    thereto will adequately protect regulated telephone ratepayers from a 
    misallocation of costs that could lead to excessive telephone rates. 
    Neither NCTA nor the Alliance for Community Media, et al. has advanced 
    any new evidence or substantive arguments that a separate affiliate 
    requirement is a necessary additional safeguard to protect against 
    cross-subsidization.
    
    IV. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
    
        72. As required by Section 603 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 
    U.S.C. Sec. 603 (RFA), an Initial Regulatory
    
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    Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated in the Report and Order 
    and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (``NPRM'') in CS Docket No. 96-46 and 
    CC Docket No. 87-266 (terminated) (In the Matter of Implementation of 
    Section 302 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996--Open Video Systems), 
    FCC 96-99, 61 FR 10496 (March 14, 1996), released March 11, 1996. The 
    Commission sought written public comments on the proposals in the NPRM 
    including comments on the IRFA, and addressed these responses in the 
    Second Report and Order in CS Docket No. 96-46 (In the Matter of 
    Implementation of Section 302 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996--
    Open Video Systems), FCC 96-249, 61 FR 28698 (June 5, 1996), released 
    June 3, 1996. No IRFA was attached to the Second Report and Order 
    because the Second Report and Order only adopted final regulations and 
    did not propose regulations. This Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis 
    (FRFA) therefore addresses the impact of regulations on small entities 
    only as adopted or modified in this Third Report and Order and Second 
    Order on Reconsideration and not as adopted or modified in earlier 
    stages of this rulemaking proceeding. The FRFA conforms to the RFA, as 
    amended by the Contract with America Advancement Act of 1996 (CWAAA), 
    Public Law No. 104-121, 110 Stat. 847.
        73. Need for Action and Objectives of the Rule. The rulemaking 
    implements Section 302 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Public 
    Law No. 104-104, 110 Stat. 56. Section 302 directs the Commission to 
    promulgate regulations governing the establishment and operation of 
    open video systems. The purposes of this action are to establish a 
    structure for open video systems that provides competitive benefits, 
    including market entry by new service providers, enhanced competition, 
    streamlined regulation, investment in infrastructure and technology, 
    diversity of video programming choices and increased consumer choice.
        74. Summary and Assessment of Issues Raised by Petitioners in 
    Response to the IRFA. With respect to the Third Report and Order, 
    several parties filed comments in the Cable Reform Proceeding and also 
    filed petitions for reconsideration of the Second Report and Order 
    regarding the definition of the term ``affiliate'' in the context of 
    the new statutory provisions for open video systems. These comments and 
    the Commission's report are summarized in Section III, above. As 
    mentioned, no IRFA was attached to the Second Report and Order. In 
    petitions for reconsideration of the Second Report and Order, however, 
    some parties raised issues that generally could involve small entities. 
    For example, local cities urge the Commission to: (1) further ensure 
    that local governments receive notification of an operator's intent to 
    establish an open video system, by requiring an operator to serve a 
    copy of FCC Form 1275 on all affected local municipalities; and (3) 
    require an open video system operator to match, rather than share, the 
    local cable operator's PEG access obligations. We grant reconsideration 
    of these issues. Other parties, including potentially small business 
    video programming providers, urge the Commission to enhance programming 
    providers' ability to access information necessary to pursue a rate 
    complaint against an open video system operator. We also grant 
    reconsideration on this issue. Local television stations urge the 
    Commission to require that open video system operators tailor the 
    distribution of must-carry signals to the parts of their system that 
    are located within a station's local service area so that stations 
    electing must-carry status do not have to reimburse the operators for 
    extensive copyright fees that may result from carriage beyond their 
    local service areas. We grant reconsideration on this point.
        75. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities 
    Impacted. The RFA defines the term ``small entity'' as having the same 
    meaning as the terms ``small business,'' ``small organization,'' and 
    ``small governmental jurisdiction,'' and the same meaning as the term 
    ``small business concern'' under Section 3 of the Small Business Act. A 
    small 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). The rules we adopt today apply to municipalities, television 
    stations, and business video programming providers. The rules also 
    apply to entities that are likely to become open video system 
    operators, including local exchange carriers and cable systems.
        76. Local Exchange Carriers. Neither the Commission nor SBA has 
    developed a definition of small providers of local exchange services 
    (LECs). The closest applicable definition under SBA rules is for 
    telephone communications companies other than radiotelephone (wireless) 
    companies. The most reliable source of information regarding the number 
    of LECs nationwide of which we are aware appears to be the data that we 
    collect annually in connection with the Telecommunications Relay 
    Service (TRS). According to our most recent data, 1,347 companies 
    reported that they were engaged in the provision of local exchange 
    services. Although it seems certain that some of these carriers are not 
    independently owned and operated, or have more than 1,500 employees, we 
    are unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number 
    of LECs that would qualify as small business concerns under SBA's 
    definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 1,347 
    small incumbent LECs that may be affected by this Order.
        77. Cable Systems: SBA has developed a definition of small entities 
    for cable and other pay television services, which includes all such 
    companies generating less than $11 million in revenue annually. This 
    definition includes cable systems operators, closed circuit television 
    services, direct broadcast satellite services, multipoint distribution 
    systems, satellite master antenna systems and subscription television 
    services. According to the Census Bureau, there were 1,323 such cable 
    and other pay television services generating less than $11 million in 
    revenue that were in operation for at least one year at the end of 
    1992.
        78. The Commission has developed its own definition of a small 
    cable system operator for the purposes of rate regulation. Under the 
    Commission's rules, a ``small cable company,'' is one serving fewer 
    than 400,000 subscribers nationwide. Based on our most recent 
    information, we estimate that there were 1,439 cable operators that 
    qualified as small cable system operators at the end of 1995. Since 
    then, some of those companies may have grown to serve over 400,000 
    subscribers; thus, we estimate that there are fewer than 1,439 small 
    entity cable system operators that may be affected by this Order.
        79. The Communications Act also contains a definition of a small 
    cable system operator, which is ``a cable operator that, directly or 
    through an affiliate, serves in the aggregate fewer than 1 percent of 
    all subscribers in the United States and is not affiliated with any 
    entity or entities whose gross annual revenues in the aggregate exceed 
    $250,000,000.'' The Commission has found that an operator serving fewer 
    than 617,000 subscribers shall be deemed a small operator. Based on 
    available data, we find that the number of cable operators serving 
    617,000 subscribers or less totals 1,450. Although it seems certain 
    that some of these cable system operators are affiliated with entities 
    whose gross annual revenues exceed $250,000,000,
    
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    we cannot estimate with greater precision the number of cable system 
    operators that would qualify as small cable operators under the 
    definition in the Communications Act.
        80. Municipalities: The term ``small governmental jurisdiction'' is 
    defined as ``governments of * * * districts, with a population of less 
    than fifty thousand.'' There are 85,006 governmental entities in the 
    United States. This number includes such entities as states, counties, 
    cities, utility districts and school districts. We note that any 
    official actions with respect to open video systems will typically be 
    undertaken by LFAs, which primarily consist of counties, cities and 
    towns. Of the 85,006 governmental entities, 38,978 are counties, cities 
    and towns. The remainder are primarily utility districts, school 
    districts, and states, which typically are not LFAs. Of the 38,978 
    counties, cities and towns, 37,566 or 96%, have populations of fewer 
    than 50,000. Thus, approximately 37,500 ``small governmental 
    jurisdictions'' may be affected by the rules adopted in this Third 
    Report and Order and Second Order on Reconsideration.
        81. Television Stations: The SBA defines small television 
    broadcasting stations as television broadcasting stations with $10.5 
    million or less in annual receipts. 13 CFR Sec. 121.201. According to 
    the Census Bureau, in 1992, there were 1,155 out of 1,478 operating 
    television stations reported revenues of less than $10 million for 
    1992. This represents 78% of all television stations, including non-
    commercial stations. The Census Bureau does not separate the revenue 
    data by commercial and non-commercial stations in this report. Neither 
    does it allow us to determine the number of stations with a maximum of 
    10.5 million dollars in annual receipts. Census data also indicates 
    that 81 percent of operating firms (that owned at least one television 
    station) had revenues of less than 10 million dollars.
        82. Based on the foregoing worst case analysis using census data, 
    we estimate that our rules will apply to as many as 1,150 commercial 
    and non-commercial television stations (78 percent of all stations) 
    that could be classified as small entities. Using a worst case analysis 
    based on the data in the BIA data base, we estimate that as many as 
    approximately 771 commercial television stations (about 68 percent of 
    all commercial televisions stations) could be classified as small 
    entities. As we noted above, these estimates are based on a definition 
    that we tentatively believe greatly overstates the number of television 
    broadcasters that are small businesses. Further, it should be noted 
    that under the SBA's definitions, revenues of affiliates that are not 
    television stations should be aggregated with the television station 
    revenues in determining whether a concern is small. The estimates 
    overstate the number of small entities since the revenue figures on 
    which they are based do not include or aggregate such revenues from 
    non-television affiliated companies.
        83. Video Programming Providers: Open video systems are an entirely 
    new framework for delivering video programming to consumers. No open 
    video systems have yet been certified to operate. Therefore, it is not 
    possible at this time to estimate the size or number of video 
    programming providers that may seek capacity on open video systems. We 
    anticipate that two types of video programming providers may arise: (1) 
    video programming providers seeking to utilize an open video system to 
    offer a package of individual programming services via open video 
    systems to subscribers; and (2) providers seeking to offer only one 
    programming service. It is not possible to estimate the impact on or 
    the number of video programming providers in the first category because 
    no such entities exist. With respect to the second category, however, 
    we believe that small cable programming services may provide a 
    reasonable substitute. The Census Bureau category most similar to cable 
    programming services is ``motion picture and video tape production.'' 
    SIC Code 7812. Under this category, entities with less than $21.5 
    million in annual receipts are defined as small motion picture and 
    video tape production entities. There are a total of 7,265 motion 
    picture and video tape production entities; of those, 7,002 have annual 
    receipts of less than $24.5 million. The figures are not broken down 
    further. We estimate that approximately 7,000 small cable programming 
    services, or video programming providers, may be affected by the rules 
    adopted in this Order. The Census Bureau data does not reflect a likely 
    significant number of small, independent motion picture and video tape 
    production companies. It is not possible at this time to estimate this 
    number because no publicly available data is available that is specific 
    to such entities. We therefore estimate that a minimum of 7,000 small 
    cable programming services, or video programming providers, may be 
    affected by this rule.
        84. Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other Compliance Requirements. The 
    following addresses the requirements of regulations adopted, amended, 
    modified or clarified on reconsideration in the Third Report and Order 
    and Second Order on Reconsideration. We adopt a definition of 
    ``affiliate'' that will impact open video system operators and their 
    affiliates, including open video system operators that are small 
    entities. A primary effect of this rule concerns situations where 
    demand for carriage exceeds the open video system's channel capacity, 
    where the open video system operator and its affiliates are prohibited 
    from selecting the video programming services for carriage on more than 
    one-third of the activated channel capacity on its system. We revise 
    FCC Form 1275 to require that applicants to become open video system 
    operators, including applicants that are small businesses, list the 
    names of the local communities in which they intend to operate. Listing 
    the names of the communities will neither require any specialized 
    skills nor impose significant new burdens.
        85. We modify our regulations to require that an open video system 
    applicant, including those that are small entities, serve a copy of its 
    FCC Form 1275 on all affected local communities on or before the date 
    it is filed with the Commission. Merely serving the form on all 
    affected local communities will not require any specialized skills. We 
    modify our regulations to require that advertising availabilities (``ad 
    avails'') associated with a programming service carried by both the 
    open video system operator or its affiliated video programming provider 
    and an unaffiliated provider must be shared in an equitable manner. 
    This may impose burdens on open video system operators, including those 
    that are small entities, because an operator must now share the 
    revenues or other benefits of such ad avails with unaffiliated 
    entities, rather than keeping all such revenues. We find that 
    implementing this approach requires no specialized skills.
        86. We modify our regulations to permit an open video system 
    operator to recover the gross revenues fee from all video programming 
    providers using the platform on a proportional basis as an element of 
    the carriage rate. This approach may impose additional burdens on video 
    programming providers, including those that are small entities, because 
    the carriage rate may be increased to reflect the open video system 
    operator's gross revenues fees. We find that implementing this approach 
    requires no specialized skills. We modify our regulations to require 
    open video system operators, in the absence of a negotiated agreement, 
    to match, rather than share, all public, educational and governmental 
    (``PEG'')
    
    [[Page 43173]]
    
    access financial contributions of the local cable operator. This 
    matching requirement could result in additional financial burdens on 
    open video system operators, including those that are small entities, 
    because matching the cable operator's PEG access financial 
    contributions will be more costly in many situations than merely 
    sharing the cable operator's contributions towards PEG access services, 
    facilities and equipment, as permitted under the previous approach. We 
    find that implementing this approach requires no specialized skills.
        87. We modify our regulations so that, in areas where a cable 
    franchise previously existed, the local franchise authority will be 
    permitted, absent a negotiated agreement, to elect either: (1) to 
    maintain the previously existing PEG access requirements; or (2) to 
    have the open video system operator's PEG access obligations determined 
    by comparison to the nearest operating cable system that has a 
    commitment to provide PEG access and that serves a franchise area with 
    a similar population size. Every 15 years thereafter, the LFA is 
    permitted to make a similar election. This requirement could impose new 
    burdens on open video system operators, including those that are small 
    entities, because an operator's PEG access obligations may be increased 
    when compared to the nearest operating cable system that has a 
    commitment to provide PEG access and that serves a franchise area with 
    a similar population size. The order requires a broadcast station to 
    make the same election for open video systems and cable systems in the 
    same geographic area, unless the overlapping open video system is 
    unable to deliver appropriate signals in conformance with the broadcast 
    station's elections for all cable systems serving the same geographic 
    area. We estimate that this requirement will have an impact on some 
    broadcast stations. We anticipate that this requirement will not 
    require any more professional skills than are required to make such 
    elections and notify operators in the context of cable systems.
        88. The order requires an open video system operator to pay for any 
    additional copyright fees incurred as a result of carrying a local 
    signal outside of its local service area. We estimate that this 
    requirement may affect a limited number of large open video system 
    operators. We anticipate that distribution of signals outside of a 
    local market will most likely occur on large systems that overlap 
    several markets. If additional copyright fees are incurred by an open 
    video system operator, we do not anticipate that the operator will have 
    to use any professional skills beyond those already used to comply with 
    the copyright rules. The order holds an open video system operator 
    responsible for any violation of our sports exclusivity rules. We 
    estimate that this requirement will have an impact on open video system 
    operators and programmers, but will not require the use of any 
    additional professional skills.
        89. We allow open video system operators to permit programming 
    providers, including those affiliated with the open video system, to 
    use their own navigational devices, subject to certain conditions. If 
    the open video system operator permits programming providers to use 
    their own navigational devices, the open video system operator must 
    provide a nondiscriminatory guide or menu that all programming 
    providers must carry, showing all programming available on the systems. 
    We estimate that the requirement could result in additional burdens on 
    open video system operators including small open video system 
    operators. We find that implementing this approach requires no 
    specialized skills. We clarify our regulations to require that the 
    preliminary rate estimate provided by an open video system operator to 
    video programming providers must include, upon request, all information 
    needed to calculate the average rate paid by unaffiliated programming 
    providers receiving carriage on the system, including the information 
    needed for any weighting of the individual carriage rates that the 
    operator has included in the average rate. This clarification may 
    impose new burdens on open video system operators, including those that 
    are small entities, because an open video system operator may have to 
    prepare this information earlier than under the previous approach.
        90. Steps Taken to Minimize the Significant Economic Impact on 
    Small Entities and Significant Alternatives Rejected. This section 
    analyzes the impact on small entities in the contexts of regulations 
    adopted, amended, modified or clarified in this Third Report and Order 
    and Second Order on Reconsideration. With respect to the definition of 
    affiliate, we adopt the attribution standard that applies in the cable 
    program access context. The factual, legal and policy reasons are set 
    forth in Section II, above. The definition of affiliate we adopt will 
    create opportunities for unaffiliated programmers, many of which may be 
    small entities, by promoting diversity of video programming sources. We 
    rejected several alternatives to this definition of affiliate, as 
    described in Section II, above. Requiring applicants to list the names 
    of all local communities in which they intend to operate will not 
    impose significant new burdens on applicants for the reasons stated 
    above and will reduce burdens on the affected local communities, 
    including those that are small entities. This approach will also reduce 
    the burdens on open video system operators by reducing the potential 
    for confusion over which local communities will be served by the open 
    video system.
        91. Requiring service of FCC Form 1275 on local communities, as 
    described above, will impose only minimal new burdens on open video 
    system operators, including those that are small entities. These 
    burdens are outweighed by the benefits to local communities, such as 
    ensuring that a local community without ready access to the Internet or 
    the Commission's Public Notices will be made aware of the applicant's 
    filing. The factual, legal and policy reasons are described in Section 
    III.B. This approach will reduce the burdens on open video system 
    operators by reducing the potential for confusion over which local 
    communities will be served by the open video system. The primary 
    significant alternative is not requiring such service, but as stated, 
    we find that the benefits to local communities outweigh any minimal 
    burdens of complying with this rule. Requiring that ad avails 
    associated with a programming service carried by both the open video 
    system operator or its affiliated video programming provider and an 
    unaffiliated provider be shared in an equitable manner may impose 
    burdens on open video system operators, including those that are small 
    entities. Such burdens are described in the preceeding section of this 
    FRFA. However, we find these burdens are outweighed by the benefits of 
    this requirement, which include providing unaffiliated video 
    programming providers with an equitable share of income from ad avails 
    and preventing the open video system operator or its affiliate from 
    having a significant financial advantage over unaffiliated video 
    programming providers. The factual, legal and policy reasons are 
    described in Section III.C. We reduce the burdens on open video system 
    operators by specifying examples of acceptable methods of sharing ad 
    avails, including apportioning the relevant revenues or apportioning 
    the rights to sell the avails themselves. The primary significant 
    alternative is maintaining our current rules which do not require such 
    sharing; however, as stated, we find that the benefits to unaffiliated
    
    [[Page 43174]]
    
    video programming providers outweigh the burdens of complying with this 
    rule.
        92. Modifying our rules to permit an open video system operator to 
    recover the gross revenues fee from all video programming providers 
    using the platform on a proportional basis as an element of the 
    carriage rate may impose additional burdens on video programming 
    providers, including those that are small entities. However, we find 
    that these burdens, as described above, are outweighed by the benefits 
    to open video system operators and are in the interests of competition. 
    Permitting this recoupment of the gross revenues fee should promote 
    competition on the platform among video programming providers by not 
    disadvantaging any particular video programming provider with respect 
    to the payment of the gross revenues fee. The factual, legal and policy 
    reasons for this approach are described above in Section III.E. This 
    approach will reduce burdens on open video system operators by 
    permitting them to recoup a proportion of these costs from video 
    programming providers. The primary significant alternative we rejected 
    is maintaining our current regulations which may have permitted 
    unaffiliated video programming providers to avoid paying any share of 
    the gross revenues fee; however, as stated, we find that the benefits 
    to open video system operators outweigh the burdens of this approach on 
    video programming providers. Requiring open video system operators to 
    match, rather than share, all PEG access financial contributions of the 
    local cable operator may impose burdens on open video system operators, 
    including those that are small entities. These burdens are described in 
    the preceeding section of this FRFA. We find that these burdens are 
    outweighed by the benefits of this revised approach. The factual, 
    policy and legal reasons for this approach are described in Section 
    III.F. We believe that this approach may reduce burdens on open video 
    system operators by providing further certainty as to their PEG access 
    financial obligations. Significant alternatives we rejected include: 
    (1) maintaining our current rules which permit an open video system 
    operator to share the PEG access contributions. Generally, we rejected 
    this alternative because we find that the matching principle more 
    accurately fulfills the 1996 Act's mandate to impose PEG access 
    obligations on open video system operators that are ``no greater or 
    lesser'' than those imposed on cable operators.
        93. Modifying a local franchise authority's ability to make an 
    election concerning the PEG access obligations of an open video system 
    operator, as described in the preceeding section of this FRFA, may 
    impose additional burdens on open video system operators, including 
    those that are small entities. These burdens are described above. 
    However, we find that these burdens are outweighed by the benefits of 
    this approach, which include preventing PEG access obligations from 
    being frozen in perpetuity, thereby providing significant benefits to 
    local franchise areas and communities. The factual, policy and legal 
    reasons for this approach are described above in Section III.F. This 
    approach may reduce burdens on local communities by permitting them to 
    negotiate with open video system operators with respect to PEG access 
    obligations, and on open video system operators by providing them 
    certainty as to their PEG access obligations for a period of up to 15 
    years. The primary significant alternative we rejected is maintaining 
    our current regulations which do not permit local franchise areas to 
    make this election; however, as stated, we find that the benefits to 
    local communities outweigh the burdens of this approach on open video 
    system operators. The rule which requires a broadcast station to make 
    the same election for open video systems and cable systems in the same 
    geographic area, unless the overlapping open video system is unable to 
    deliver appropriate signals in conformance with the broadcast station's 
    elections for all cable systems serving the same geographic area, may 
    impose a burden on broadcast stations. The policy, factual and legal 
    reasons for adopting this final rule are set forth in Section 
    III.F.2.b. of this Order. The rule adopted in this order may reduce 
    burdens on both open video system operators and television stations by 
    providing further certainty with respect to the must-carry status of 
    television stations.
        94. The rule which requires an open video system operator to pay 
    for any additional copyright fees incurred as a result of carrying a 
    local station beyond its local market area may impose a burden on open 
    video system operators. It has not been necessary to take significant 
    steps to minimize the burden on small open video system operators 
    because we do not believe that this rule is likely to affect many open 
    video systems and especially not smaller open video systems, because it 
    will only apply to open video systems capable of carrying broadcast 
    signals beyond their local service areas. The factual policies and 
    legal reasons for adopting this final rule are set forth in Section 
    III.F.2.b. Any burden on open video system operators is outweighed by 
    the benefit to broadcast stations, especially small stations that might 
    not be able to elect must-carry status if they were subject to 
    copyright fees in distant markets. The rule which holds an open video 
    system operator responsible for any violation of our sports exclusivity 
    rules may impose a burden on open video system operators. This burden 
    is justified by the interest in protecting exclusive rights to sports 
    programming. The factual policies and legal reasons for adopting this 
    final rule are set forth in Section III.F.4.b. The rule adopted in this 
    order applies our sports exclusivity rules to open video systems more 
    fairly than the Commission's previous rule for the reasons cited in 
    Section III.F.4.b.
        95. Allowing open video system operators to permit programming 
    providers, including those affiliated with the open video system 
    operator, to use their own navigational devices subject to certain 
    conditions may impact open video system operators and their affiliates, 
    including those that are small entities. If an operator permits 
    programming providers, including its affiliate, to develop their own 
    navigational devices, the operator must create an electronic menu or 
    guide containing a non-discriminatory listing of programming providers 
    or programming services available on the system that every programming 
    provider must carry. The factual and policy reasons for adopting the 
    final rule are found in Section III.G., above. We believe that this 
    rule minimizes burdens on open video system operators and their 
    programming affiliates, by allowing the affiliated programmers the 
    flexibility to develop and use their own navigational devices, guides 
    and menus. However, under the rule adopted, programming providers 
    cannot be required to use their own navigational devices. Such 
    providers must, upon request, have access to the navigational device 
    used by the open video system operator or its affiliate. This 
    requirement can help minimize burdens on small programming providers by 
    allowing them access to the navigational device used by the open video 
    system operator or its affiliate. Requiring that the preliminary rate 
    estimate provided by an open video system operator to video programming 
    providers include, upon request, all information needed to calculate 
    the average rate paid by unaffiliated programming providers receiving 
    carriage on the system, including the information needed for any 
    weighting of the individual carriage rates that the operator has 
    included in
    
    [[Page 43175]]
    
    the average rate, may impose burdens on open video system operator, 
    including those that are small entities. These burdens are described in 
    the preceeding section of this FRFA. However, we find that these 
    burdens are outweighed by the benefits of this clarification, which 
    include providing an unaffiliated video programming provider with 
    relevant information regarding whether to pursue a rate complaint 
    against an open video system operator. The factual, policy and legal 
    reasons are described above in Section III.H. The primary significant 
    alternative rejected by the Commission is to maintain our current rules 
    which do not require a system operator's provision of such information 
    upon request but only in formal discovery; however, as stated, we find 
    that the benefits to unaffiliated video programming providers outweigh 
    the burdens of complying with this rule.
        96. Report to Congress. The Commission shall send a copy of this 
    FRFA, along with this Third Report and Order and Second Order on 
    Reconsideration, in a report to Congress pursuant to the SBREFA, 5 
    U.S.C. Sec. 801(a)910(A). A copy of this FRFA will also be published in 
    the Federal Register.
    
    V. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 Analysis
    
        97. The requirements adopted in the Third Report and Order and 
    Second Order on Reconsideration have been analyzed with respect to the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (the ``1995 Act'') and found to impose 
    new or modified information collection requirements on the public. 
    Implementation of any new or modified requirement will be subject to 
    approval by the Office of Management and Budget (``OMB'') as prescribed 
    by the 1995 Act. The Commission, as part of its continuing effort to 
    reduce paperwork burdens, invites the general public and OMB to comment 
    on the information collections contained in this Third Report and Order 
    and Second Order on Reconsideration as required by the 1995 Act. OMB 
    comments are due October 21, 1996. Comments should address: (1) Whether 
    the proposed collection of information is necessary for the proper 
    performance of the functions of the Commission, including whether the 
    information shall have practical utility; (2) the accuracy of the 
    Commission's burden estimates; (3) ways to enhance the quality, 
    utility, and clarity of the information collected; and (4) ways to 
    minimize the burden of the collection of information on the 
    respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques or 
    other forms of information technology.
        98. Written comments by the public on the proposed and/or modified 
    information collections are due on or before September 20, 1996. 
    Written comments must be submitted by the Office of Management and 
    Budget (OMB) on the proposed and/or modified information collections on 
    or before October 21, 1996. A copy of any comments on the information 
    collections contained herein should be submitted to Dorothy Conway, 
    Federal Communications Commission, Room 234, 1919 M Street, N.W., 
    Washington, DC 20554, or via the Internet to dconway@fcc.gov and to 
    Timothy Fain, OMB Desk Officer, 10236, NEOB, 725--17th Street, N.W., 
    Washington, DC 20503 or via the Internet to fain__t@al.eop.gov. For 
    additional information concerning the information collections contained 
    herein contact Dorothy Conway at 202-418-0217, or via the Internet at 
    dconway@fcc.gov.
    
    VI. Ordering Clauses
    
        99. Accordingly, it is ordered that, pursuant to Sections 4(i), 
    4(j), 303(r), and 653 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 
    U.S.C. Secs. 154(i), 154(j), 303(r), and 573 the rules, requirements 
    and policies discussed in this Third Report and Order and Second Order 
    on Reconsideration ARE ADOPTED and Sections 76.1000 and 76.1500 through 
    76.1515 of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR Secs. 76.1000 and 76.1500 
    through 1515, ARE AMENDED as set forth below.
        100. It is further ordered that, pursuant to Sections 4(i), 4(j), 
    303(r), and 653 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 
    U.S.C. Secs. 154(i), 154(j), 303(r), and 573 the rules, the Petitions 
    for Reconsideration set forth in Appendix A are granted in part and 
    denied in part, as provided herein.
        101. It is further ordered that the requirements and regulations 
    established in this decision shall become effective upon approval by 
    OMB of the new information collection requirements adopted herein, but 
    no sooner than October 21, 1996. The Commission will issue a document 
    at such time to notify parties that the regulations established in this 
    decision are effective.
        102. It is further ordered that the Motion to Accept Late-Filed 
    Opposition filed by the Telephone Joint Petitioners is hereby granted.
        103. It is further ordered that the Secretary shall send a copy of 
    this Third Report and Order and Second Order on Reconsideration 
    including the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief 
    Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration in accordance 
    with paragraph 603(a) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, Public Law No. 
    96-354, 94 Stat. 1164, 5 U.S.C. Secs. 601 et seq. (1981).
    
    List of Subjects 47 CFR Part 76
    
        Cable television.
    
    Federal Communications Commission
    William F. Caton,
    Acting Secretary.
    
    Rule Changes
    
        Part 76 of Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations is amended 
    as follows:
    
    PART 76--CABLE TELEVISION SERVICE
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 76 continues to read as follows:
        Authority: 47 U.S.C. 151, 152, 153, 154, 301, 302, 303, 303a, 
    307, 308, 309, 312, 315, 317, 325, 503, 521, 522, 531, 532, 533, 
    534, 535, 536, 537, 543, 544, 544a, 545, 548, 552, 554, 556, 558, 
    560, 561, 571, 572, 573.
    
        2. Section 76.1500 is amended by redesignating paragraph (g) as 
    paragraph (h) and adding new paragraph (g) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 76.1500  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        (g) Affiliate. For purposes of determining whether a party is an 
    ``affiliate'' as used in this subpart, the definitions contained in the 
    notes to Sec. 76.501 shall be used, provided, however that:
        (1) The single majority shareholder provisions of Note 2(b) to 
    Sec. 76.501 and the limited partner insulation provisions of Note 2(g) 
    to Sec. 76.501 shall not apply; and
        (2) The provisions of Note 2(a) to Sec. 76.501 regarding five (5) 
    percent interests shall include all voting or nonvoting stock or 
    limited partnership equity interests of five (5) percent or more.
    * * * * *
        3. Section 76.1502 is amended by revising paragraphs (c)(6) and (d) 
    and by adding paragraph (e) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 76.1502  Certification.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (6) A list of the names of the anticipated local communities to be 
    served upon completion of the system;
    * * * * *
        (d) On or before the date an FCC Form 1275 is filed with the 
    Commission, the applicant must serve a copy of its filing
    
    [[Page 43176]]
    
    on all local communities identified pursuant to paragraph (c)(6) of 
    this section and must include a statement informing the local 
    communities of the Commission's requirements in paragraph (e) of this 
    section for filing oppositions and comments. Service by mail is 
    complete upon mailing, but if mailed, the served documents must be 
    postmarked at least three days prior to the filing of the FCC Form 1275 
    with the Commission.
        (e) Comments or oppositions to a certification must be filed within 
    five days of the Commission's receipt of the certification and must be 
    served on the party that filed the certification. If the Commission 
    does not disapprove certification within ten days after receipt of an 
    applicant's request, the certification will be deemed approved. If 
    disapproved, the applicant may file a revised certification or refile 
    its original submission with a statement addressing the issues in 
    dispute. Such refilings must be served on any objecting party or 
    parties and on all local communities in which the applicant intends to 
    operate.
        4. Section 76.1503 is amended by removing paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(C) 
    and adding new paragraph (c)(2)(v) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 76.1503  Carriage of video programming providers on open video 
    systems.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (2) * * *
        (v) Notwithstanding the general prohibition on an open video system 
    operator's discrimination among video programming providers contained 
    in paragraph (a) of this section, a competing, in-region cable operator 
    or its affiliate(s) that offers cable service to subscribers located in 
    the service area of an open video system shall not be entitled to 
    obtain capacity on such an open video system, except:
        (A) Where the operator of an open video system determines that 
    granting access to the competing, in-region cable operator is in its 
    interests; or
        (B) Where a showing is made that facilities-based competition will 
    not be significantly impeded.
    
        Note to paragraph (c)(2)(v)(B): The Commission finds that 
    facilities-based competition will not be significantly impeded, for 
    example, where:
        (1) The competing, in-region cable operator and affiliated 
    systems offer service to less than 20% of the households passed by 
    the open video system; and
        (2) The competing, in-region cable operator and affiliated 
    systems provide cable service to a total of less than 17,000 
    subscribers within the open video system's service area.
    * * * * *
        5. Section 76.1504 is amended by revising paragraph (e) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 76.1504  Rates, terms and conditions for carriage on open video 
    systems.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Determining just and reasonable rates subject to complaints 
    pursuant to the imputed rate approach or other market based approach. 
    Carriage rates subject to complaint shall be found just and reasonable 
    if one of the two following tests are met:
        (1) The imputed rate will reflect what the open video system 
    operator, or its affiliate, ``pays'' for carriage of its own 
    programming. Use of this approach is appropriate in circumstances where 
    the pricing is applicable to a new market entrant (the open video 
    system operator) that will face competition from an existing incumbent 
    provider (the incumbent cable operator), as opposed to circumstances 
    where the pricing is used to establish a rate for an essential input 
    service that is charged to a competing new entrant by an incumbent 
    provider. With respect to new market entrants, an efficient component 
    pricing model will produce rates that encourage market entry. If the 
    carriage rate to an unaffiliated program provider surpasses what an 
    operator earns from carrying its own programming, the rate can be 
    presumed to exceed a just and reasonable level. An open video system 
    operator's price to its subscribers will be determined by several 
    separate costs components. One general category are those costs related 
    to the creative development and production of programming. A second 
    category are costs associated with packaging various programs for the 
    open video system operator's offering. A third category related to the 
    infrastructure or engineering costs identified with building and 
    maintaining the open video system. Contained in each is a profit 
    allowance attributed to the economic value of each component. When an 
    open video system operator provides only carriage through its 
    infrastructure, however, the programming and packaging flows from the 
    independent program provider, who bears the cost. The open video system 
    operator avoids programming and packaging costs, including profits. 
    These avoided costs should not be reflected in the price charged an 
    independent program provider for carriage. The imputed rate also seeks 
    to recognize the loss of subscribers to the open video system 
    operator's programming package resulting from carrying competing 
    programming.
    
        Note to paragraph (e)(1): Examples of specific ``avoided costs'' 
    include:
        (1) All amounts paid to studios, syndicators, networks or 
    others, including but not limited to payments for programming and 
    all related rights;
        (2) Packaging, including marketing and other fees;
        (3) Talent fees; and
        (4) A reasonable overhead allowance for affiliated video service 
    support.
    
        (2) An open video system operator can demonstrate that its carriage 
    service rates are just and reasonable through other market based 
    approaches.
        6. Section 76.1505 is amended by revising paragraphs (d)(1), 
    (d)(4), (d)(6), the note to paragraph (d)(6), and (d)(8) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 76.1505  Public, educational and governmental access.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) * * *
        (1) The open video system operator must satisfy the same public, 
    educational and governmental access obligations as the local cable 
    operator by providing the same amount of channel capacity for public, 
    educational and governmental access and by matching the local cable 
    operator's annual financial contributions towards public, educational 
    and governmental access services, facilities and equipment that are 
    actually used for public, educational and governmental access services, 
    facilities and equipment. For in-kind contributions (e.g., cameras, 
    production studios), the open video system operator may satisfy its 
    statutory obligation by negotiating mutually agreeable terms with the 
    local cable operator, so that public, educational and governmental 
    access services to the community is improved or increased. If such 
    terms cannot be agreed upon, the open video system operator must pay 
    the local franchising authority the monetary equivalent of the local 
    cable operator's depreciated in-kind contribution, or, in the case of 
    facilities, the annual amortization value. Any matching contributions 
    provided by the open video system operator must be used to fund 
    activities arising under Section 611 of the Communications Act.
    * * * * *
        (4) The costs of connection to the cable operator's public, 
    educational and governmental access channel feed shall be borne by the 
    open video system operator. Such costs shall be counted towards the 
    open video system operator's matching financial contributions set forth 
    in paragraph (d)(4) of this section.
    * * * * *
        (6) Where there is no existing local cable operator, the open video 
    system operator must make a reasonable
    
    [[Page 43177]]
    
    amount of channel capacity available for public, educational and 
    governmental use, as well as provide reasonable support for services, 
    facilities and equipment relating to such public, educational and 
    governmental use. If a franchise agreement previously existed in that 
    franchise area, the local franchising authority may elect either to 
    impose the previously existing public, educational and governmental 
    access obligations or determine the open video system operator's 
    public, educational and governmental access obligations by comparison 
    to the franchise agreement for the nearest operating cable system that 
    has a commitment to provide public, educational and governmental access 
    and that serves a franchise area with a similar population size. The 
    local franchising authority shall be permitted to make a similar 
    election every 15 years thereafter. Absent a previous franchise 
    agreement, the open video system operator shall be required to provide 
    channel capacity, services, facilities and equipment relating to 
    public, educational and governmental access equivalent to that 
    prescribed in the franchise agreement(s) for the nearest operating 
    cable system with a commitment to provide public, educational and 
    governmental access and that serves a franchise area with a similar 
    population size.
    
        Note to paragraph (d)(6): This paragraph shall apply, for 
    example, if a cable operator converts its cable system to an open 
    video system under Sec. 76.1501.
    * * * * *
        (8) The open video system operator and/or the local franchising 
    authority may file a complaint with the Commission, pursuant to our 
    dispute resolution procedures set forth in Sec. 76.1514, if the open 
    video system operator and the local franchising authority cannot agree 
    as to the application of the Commission's rules regarding the open 
    video system operator's public, educational and governmental access 
    obligations under paragraph (d) of this section.
    * * * * *
        7. Section 76.1506 is amended by revising paragraphs (d), (l)(3) 
    and (m)(2) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 76.1506  Carriage of television broadcast signals.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) Definitions applicable to the must-carry rules. Section 76.55 
    shall apply to all open video systems in accordance with the provisions 
    contained in this section. Any provision of Sec. 76.55 that refers to a 
    ``cable system'' shall apply to an open video system. Any provision of 
    Sec. 76.55 that refers to a ``cable operator'' shall apply to an open 
    video system operator. Any provision of Sec. 76.55 that refers to the 
    ``principal headend'' of a cable system as defined in Sec. 76.5(pp) 
    shall apply to the equivalent of the principal headend of an open video 
    system. Any provision of Sec. 76.55 that refers to a ``franchise area'' 
    shall apply to the service area of an open video system. The provisions 
    of Sec. 76.55 that permit cable operators to refuse carriage of signals 
    considered distant signals for copyright purposes shall not apply to 
    open video system operators. If an open video system operator cannot 
    limit its distribution of must-carry signals to the local service area 
    of broadcast stations as used in 17 U.S.C. 111(d), it will be liable 
    for any increase in copyright fees assessed for distant signal carriage 
    under 17 U.S.C. 111.
    * * * * *
        (l) * * *
        (3) Television broadcast stations are required to make the same 
    election for open video systems and cable systems serving the same 
    geographic area, unless the overlapping open video system is unable to 
    deliver appropriate signals in conformance with the broadcast station's 
    elections for all cable systems serving the same geographic area.
    * * * * *
        (m) * * *
        (2) Notification of programming to be deleted pursuant to this 
    section shall be served on the open video system operator. The open 
    video system operator shall make all notifications immediately 
    available to the appropriate video programming providers on its open 
    video system. Operators may effect the deletion of signals for which 
    they have received deletion notices unless they receive notice within a 
    reasonable time from the appropriate programming provider that the 
    rights claimed are invalid. The open video system operator shall not 
    delete signals for which it has received notice from the programming 
    provider that the rights claimed are invalid. An open video system 
    operator shall be subject to sanctions for any violation of this 
    subpart. An open video system operator may require indemnification as a 
    condition of carriage for any sanctions it may incur in reliance on a 
    programmer's claim that certain exclusive or non-duplication rights are 
    invalid.
    * * * * *
        8. Section 76.1511 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 76.1511  Fees.
    
        An open video system operator may be subject to the payment of fees 
    on the gross revenues of the operator for the provision of cable 
    service imposed by a local franchising authority or other governmental 
    entity, in lieu of the franchise fees permitted under Section 622 of 
    the Communications Act. Local governments shall have the authority to 
    assess and receive the gross revenue fee. Gross revenues under this 
    paragraph means all gross revenues received by an open video system 
    operator or its affiliates, including all revenues received from 
    subscribers and all carriage revenues received from unaffiliated video 
    programming providers. In addition gross revenues under this paragraph 
    includes any advertising revenues received by an open video system 
    operator or its affiliates in connection with the provision of video 
    programming, where such revenues are included in the calculation of the 
    incumbent cable operator's cable franchise fee. Gross revenues does not 
    include revenues collected by unaffiliated video programming providers, 
    such as subscriber or advertising revenues. Any gross revenues fee that 
    the open video system operator or its affiliate collects from 
    subscribers or video programming providers shall be excluded from gross 
    revenues. An operator of an open video system or any programming 
    provider may designate that portion of a subscriber's bill attributable 
    to the fee as a separate item on the bill. An operator of an open video 
    system may recover the gross revenue fee from programming providers on 
    a proportional basis as an element of the carriage rate.
        9. Section 76.1512 is amended by revising paragraphs (b), (c) and 
    (d) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 76.1512  Programming information.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) In accordance with paragraph (a) of this section:
        (1) An open video system operator shall not discriminate in favor 
    of itself or its affiliate on any navigational device, guide or menu;
        (2) An open video system operator shall not omit television 
    broadcast stations or other unaffiliated video programming services 
    carried on the open video system from any navigational device, guide 
    (electronic or paper) or menu;
        (3) An open video system operator shall not restrict a video 
    programming provider's ability to use part of the provider's channel 
    capacity to provide an individualized guide or menu to the provider's 
    subscribers;
        (4) Where an open video system operator provides no navigational 
    device, guide or menu, its affiliate's
    
    [[Page 43178]]
    
    navigational device, guide or menu shall be subject to the requirements 
    of Section 653(b)(1)(E) of the Communications Act;
        (5) An open video system operator may permit video programming 
    providers, including its affiliate, to develop and use their own 
    navigational devices. If an open video system operator permits video 
    programming providers, including its affiliate, to develop and use 
    their own navigational devices, the operator must create an electronic 
    menu or guide that all video programming providers must carry 
    containing a non-discriminatory listing of programming providers or 
    programming services available on the system and informing the viewer 
    how to obtain additional information on each of the services listed;
        (6) An open video system operator must grant access, for 
    programming providers that do not wish to use their own navigational 
    device, to the navigational device used by the open video system 
    operator or its affiliate; and
        (7) If an operator provides an electronic guide or menu that 
    complies with paragraph (b)(5) of this section, its programming 
    affiliate may create its own menu or guide without being subject to the 
    requirements of Section 653(b)(1)(E) of the Communications Act.
        (c) An open video system operator shall ensure that video 
    programming providers or copyright holders (or both) are able to 
    suitably and uniquely identify their programming services to 
    subscribers.
        (d) An open video system operator shall transmit programming 
    identification without change or alteration if such identification is 
    transmitted as part of the programming signal.
        10. Section 76.1513 is amended by adding a note following paragraph 
    (e)(1)(viii) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 76.1513  Dispute resolution.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) * * *
        (1) * * *
        (viii) * * *
        Note to paragraph (e)(1)(viii): Upon request by a complainant, 
    the preliminary carriage rate estimate shall include a calculation 
    of the average of the carriage rates paid by the unaffiliated video 
    programming providers receiving carriage from the open video system 
    operator, including the information needed for any weighting of the 
    individual carriage rates that the operator has included in the 
    average rate.
    * * * * *
        11. Section 76.1514 is amended by revising paragraph (b) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 76.1514  Bundling of video and local exchange services.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Any local exchange carrier offering such a package must impute 
    the unbundled tariff rate for the regulated service.
    
    [FR Doc. 96-21262 Filed 8-20-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
08/21/1996
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
96-21262
Pages:
43160-43178 (19 pages)
Docket Numbers:
CS Docket No. 96-46, FCC 96-334
PDF File:
96-21262.pdf
CFR: (13)
47 CFR 73.3555
47 CFR 76.55
47 CFR 76.501
47 CFR 76.1500
47 CFR 76.1502
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