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ALJ Pauses Standard/General Hearing Proceeding Until June 1

FCC Administrative Law Judge Jane Halprin continued the FCC’s hearing proceeding on Standard/Tegna until June 1 -- effectively pausing it -- and denied broadcaster requests to limit additional discovery, said attorneys representing both sides in the case. Halprin made the…

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ruling at a status conference at the FCC Wednesday that had been set to determine the deal’s schedule, attorneys said. The Standard/Tegna broadcasters requested an accelerated hearing schedule with no additional discovery (see 2304200060), but Halprin denied that request Wednesday. Standard General didn’t comment on the ruling, but the Standard/Tegna broadcast parties have steadfastly said the deal can’t be extended past May 22 due to the expiration of financing that can’t be replaced (see 2304180074). With a quick hearing out of reach, the FCC's reversing itself and voting the deal is likely the only road left to the broadcasters, attorneys said. The broadcasters are expected to try to put pressure on the agency through Congress, multiple attorneys said. “Until more recently, this summer, we never had a lobbyist in D.C.,” Managing Partner Soohyung Kim said last week at the NAB Show. “Now we are employing like half of D.C.” In a news release Wednesday, Standard General highlighted remarks from Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., Tuesday saying he won’t support FCC nominees “if they are unwilling to support diversity -- including by acting in a way that denies a vote to a diverse applicant.” FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks -- the only commissioner yet to take a public stance on the deal -- is likely soon to be up for renomination. In a joint statement Wednesday, Asian Americans Advancing Justice, National Action Network, the National Urban League and UnidosUS urged the FCC to hold a commission vote on the deal. “As FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks said in a recent speech on diversity in media: ‘We need to do better,’" the release said. “We will not call on the Commissioners to cast their votes one way or the other. But what we do demand is fair and equal treatment,” the civil rights groups said. “And, so far, ‘fair and equal treatment’ has not been the order of the day.” Starks didn’t comment.