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Audible Crawl Waiver Extended 18 Months; Quarterly Reports Added

The FCC Media Bureau extended broadcasters’ waiver of the audible crawl requirements, but by 18 months rather than the two years requested by NAB and with a new quarterly progress report requirement, said an order Friday, the same day the…

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current waiver expired. Consumer groups urged the FCC not to extend the waiver. “The record demonstrates that a viable technical solution for automated descriptions of emergency information presented in graphic form does not currently exist,” the Media Bureau said. “The critical details of an emergency provided in graphic form are in most instances duplicative of information conveyed in textual crawls, which are already aurally described.” Compliance with the requirement for a secondary audio stream describing emergency information conveyed on the main stream through graphics was originally required in 2015 but has been repeatedly waived, most recently by a five-year waiver granted in 2018. The Media Bureau said Friday it granted the waiver for 18 months instead of two years because of the repeated extensions. This extension also comes with a requirement for NAB to submit quarterly status reports to the Media and Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau. The reports, which were requested by consumer groups (see 2305150032), should assess the continuing need for the waiver, describe NAB’s outreach to the disabled community about the audible crawl, and NAB’s efforts to develop an automated solution “such as solutions afforded by AI-based systems or the ongoing adoption of ATSC 3.0 in more television markets,” the order said. The reports also need to describe training and best practices for broadcasters on conveying non-textual emergency information, and alternative solutions broadcasters and the disability community pursue, the order said. "Today’s waiver extension is critical for broadcasters to continue to provide vital emergency information to the public," said an NAB spokesperson. "NAB very much appreciates both the Commission’s and consumer groups’ willingness to engage with us to find meaningful ways for broadcasters to serve all of our viewers."