The FCC filing window for applications for noncommercial educational FM construction permits will be open Nov. 2-9, said a Media Bureau public notice Wednesday. "The window is available for FM reserved band (channels 201-220) proposals." The agency adopted and deleted from Thursday’s commissioners' meeting agenda a PN setting the limit for the NCE FM window at 10 applications, said a deletion notice. That item was considered noncontroversial (see 2104200074). Media Bureau Chief Michelle Carey said the 4-0 OK'd version had few changes from the draft, answering our question in a reporter Q&A Thursday.
Comments are due May 24, replies June 7 in docket 21-152 on Gray Television’s request for the allotment of DTV channel 9 at Freeport, Illinois, says Thursday's Federal Register. Entities seeking to participate in a hearing on Vandalia Media Partners 2’s license renewal application for WJEH Gallipolis, Ohio, also have until May 24 to file a petition for leave to intervene in docket 21-118, the FR says.
FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr condemned Democrats in Congress over reports that they seek to pressure the FCC into blocking the sale of WSUA(AM) Miami over political viewpoints. Carr’s Monday evening statement referenced a report members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus want the FCC to oppose the sale. That report was retweeted by Rep. Darren Soto, D-Fla. “We can no longer allow conservative media to lead Spanish-language misinformation campaigns on Florida's Latino communities,” he said. “It's time for the FCC to intervene.” Carr responded that “the FCC has no business doing the Democrats’ bidding or using our regulatory process to censor political opinions that Democrats do not like.” He condemned “treating the FCC as merely an arm” of the Democratic National Committee and called “on my FCC colleagues to join me in publicly rejecting this attempt to inject partisan politics into our licensing process.” No other FCC commissioners released a similar statement Tuesday. Although no application for the sale of the station has been filed with the FCC, it has been reported that the deal would involve the station being sold to America CV Network by current owner WSUA Broadcasting.
The FCC Media Bureau canceled a notice of apparent liability against a school-affiliated radio station after learning that COVID-19 restrictions had affected access to the outlet and the licensee mistakenly believed it had filed a timely license renewal application, said an order Monday. MB changed a proposed $3,000 forfeiture for WCHW-FM Bay City, Michigan to an admonishment: Staff determined several renewal applications were begun in time but not filed. “Licensee misunderstood our electronic filing procedures,” the order said. The bureau changed a $6,000 proposed forfeiture to an admonishment for WKRA (AM/FM) Holly Springs, Mississippi, after licensee Billy Autry submitted tax returns demonstrating inability to pay.
The FCC Media Bureau is seeking comment on two channel substitution requests, said two NPRMs in Friday’s Daily Digest. Sinclair Boise Licensee wants to swap KBOI-TV Boise from channel 9 to 20 in docket 21-156, and KTVL Licensee wants to switch KTVL Medford, Oregon, from channel 10 to 16 in docket 21-155. Commenting dates will be determined after the items appear in the Federal Register.
Several broadcaster groups want changes to the draft order on requiring disclosures from broadcasters for content sponsored by foreign governments, said ex parte filings last week in docket 20-299, at the close of the filing window before the agency’s Thursday meeting (see 2104010056). The draft’s proposal to require broadcasters to use “reasonable diligence” to identify content sponsored by foreign governments “appears to sweep in thousands of leasing agreements, forcing broadcasters who never have and never will contract to air foreign government-sponsored content to expend a great deal of time, energy and expense,” NAB told the Media Bureau and an aide to acting Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. The broadcast trade group said the issue could be addressed with “minor” changes, such as a threshold for when the reasonable diligence standard could be applied. As written, the draft would require broadcasters involved in any leasing arrangement to do “extensive and costly due diligence” when such deals are executed and every six months afterward, said the National Association of Black Owned Broadcasters. NPR said it approves of the draft item but seeks a language change to acknowledge rules against noncommercial educational stations receiving compensation. The Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council also asked for changes (see 2104150063).
Alpha Media's former CEO and minority shareholder Lawrence Wilson accused board members Noel Strauss, Saif Mansour and current Alpha CEO Bob Proffitt of making false certifications to the FCC, unauthorized transfers of control and “blatant, unlawful self-dealing,” in a petition to deny foreign-ownership filings for the radio broadcaster’s bankruptcy restructuring. The Wednesday filing asks the FCC to deny the petitions or designate the matter for hearing. The petition is “based on inaccurate information and baseless claims,” said an Alpha spokesperson Friday. “We continue to achieve significant progress in our financial restructuring process, which has been confirmed by the Court and best positions Alpha Media with strong financial partners to navigate current market conditions.” Wilson said the restructuring is “a prepackaged bankruptcy plan” that would “erase the obligations owed to secured and unsecured creditors and minority stockholders” and swap out minority shareholders "in favor of proposed foreign-owned lenders and stockholders.” By failing to comply with its corporate governing documents, Alpha bypassed its board on decisions such as station divestitures, and concentrated power within the company to two members of a special committee, Wilson said. That amounts to an unauthorized transfer of control, the petition said. “There is no doubt” that Proffitt “falsely certified to the FCC that he was ‘authorized’ to sign multiple assignment applications selling certain of Alpha’s stations to third parties,” Wilson said. A broadcast attorney told us the FCC historically doesn’t involve itself in licensees' internal disputes, but the filing argues that FCC oversight has “heightened importance” here because Alpha isn’t publicly traded and therefore doesn’t fall under the SEC. Alpha has “fundamental character defects” that “call into question the applicant’s qualifications as a broadcast licensee,” the filing said. The FCC didn't comment.
The foreign-sponsored broadcast content draft order on the FCC's April 22 agenda (see 2103310050) takes an overly broad approach when a "miniscule" number of stations air the type of foreign propaganda that prompted the proceeding, said the Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council in a docket 20-299 filing to be posted. MMTC said the result is costly due diligence requirements that will be especially burdensome on small broadcasters. Instead, the commission should tailor its diligence requirements to instances where the broadcaster has reason to believe a foreign government is the source of particular programming, MMTC said.
The FCC Media Bureau granted KRCG Licensee’s request to substitute channel 29 for 12 for KRCG Jefferson City, Missouri, said an order in Wednesday’s Daily Digest. The bureau also seeks comment in docket 21-151 on Sinclair Eugene’s petition to swap KVAL-TV Eugene, Oregon, from channel 13 to 28, and in docket 21-152 on Gray’s petition to allot channel 9 to Freeport, Illinois, as the region’s first local TV service.
Grupo Televisa will sell its content assets to Univision for $4.8 billion, Televisa said in a news release Tuesday. The new company will be called Televisa-Univision and will be led by Univision CEO Wade Davis, the release said. “The transaction is expected to close in 2021, subject to customary closing conditions, including receipt of regulatory approvals in the United States and Mexico, and Televisa shareholder approval,” it said. The combined company will be “the largest Spanish-language media company in the world,” the release said. The assets also include “four free-to-air channels, 27 pay-TV networks channels and stations, its Videocine movie studio and Blim TV subscription video on demand (SVOD) service; and the Televisa trademark,” the release said. Japanese holding company SoftBank International is investing $1 billion in the deal. Its involvement will likely require specific FCC approval due to foreign-ownership rules, a broadcast attorney said. After the deal, SoftBank International CEO Marcelo Claure will become vice chairman of the new company's board.