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D.C. Circuit Should Grant Standard/Tegna, Not Remand It, Say Broadcasters

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit should reverse the FCC’s hearing designation order (HDO) and require the agency to grant the Standard/Tegna applications rather than remand the matter to the commission, said the broadcast parties to the…

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deal in an appellant brief filed in docket 10-83 Thursday. “Given that only 53 days remain to complete the transaction, there is reason to fear that the FCC could run out the clock on remand to consummate its pocket veto of the applications,” said Standard General, Tegna, and Cox Media Group. The evidence in favor of granting the deal is “overwhelming,” so there's “thus no reason to hold a hearing,” the broadcasters said. “There is no further factfinding or deliberation the agency could conduct that would shed additional light on the transactions.” The brief again raises the broadcasters’ previous arguments on the FCC outreaching its authority by issuing the HDO based on questions concerning retransmission consent and job losses, and on the constitutionality of administrative law judges. ALJ Jane Halprin failed to comply with the HDO because she hasn’t set a schedule with a set date for the resolution of the FCC hearing proceeding, the broadcasters said. A status conference to determine the schedule is set for April 26. “The proper remedy is reversal, not mere remand,” the broadcasters said.