NAB Launches 2022 Election Toolkit for Broadcasters
The NAB is now making its 2022 Election Toolkit available as an online resource providing local television and radio broadcasters with ideas and information to cover the 2022 local, state and federal elections.
Possible ‘Last Communication,’ and Last Rites, For Ohio LPFM
By the time you read this, the FCC's Administrative Law Judge may have already ruled on the license revocation for a Marion, Ohio-based low-power FM radio station accused of misrepresentation and false statements that failed to secure legal counsel as ordered by the Commission for the hearing. But, Shawn Craft, the individual associated with WWGH-LPFM, is going out swinging.
Anti-LRFA Music Industry Lobby Rejects Further Radio Consolidation
An FCC filing submitted by musicFIRST, the recording industry lobbying group that seeks to impose new royalty payments on broadcast radio stations across the U.S., offers no further arguments on the subject or any statements in opposition of the non-binding Local Radio Freedom Act. Rather, musicFIRST and joint filer Future of Music Coalition seek to claim a position for small-market radio that may simply benefit themselves, advancing their own music licensing proposals groups such as the NAB won't want.
Senate Judiciary Committee Schedules JCPA Markup
A markup of the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act is scheduled for Thursday. However, that make not take place until after Members of the Senate Judiciary Committee come back from their summer vacation.
FCC, NTIA Sign New Spectrum Coordination ‘MOU’
The FCC and the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) have an updated Memorandum of Understanding between the agencies on spectrum coordination in place. This marks the first time the MOU has been updated in nearly 20 years.
Civil Penalty Comes To Silberberg For Improper License Transfer
Northeast Broadcasting, whose assets include WXRV "The River" in Boston and WNCS, home of "The Point Radio Network" in Vermont, didn't make the requisite moves it needed to take to indicate a change in ownership for the group of stations following the death of company founder Steven Silberberg in January 2021. The solution? The signing of a consent decree with the Commission that sees Northeast pay a substantial civil penalty to the U.S. Treasury.
Local TV Market Publication Update NPRM Comment Dates Set
With the opening of Media Bureau Docket No. 22-239, the FCC is moving forward with a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking seeking comment on updating its rules to reference the most up-to-date market information for determining a television station’s local market for cable and satellite carriage purposes. You may now offer your thoughts and suggests to the Commission on what road it should take — one Nate Simington says may not be exclusive to Nielsen.
City of License Move For New FM Upheld Again By FCC
In April 2017, Threshold Communications emerged as the lone bidders in a FCC auction for a brand-new FM. It then asked the Media Bureau to relocate its city of license from Columbia County, Ore., to a city in Washington due north of Longview. The Media Bureau agreed, but an interloper didn't. It was so against the move that it filed a Second Petition for Reconsideration in the hopes that the FCC would change its mind. It did not.
The FCC Names A New CIO
There's a new Chief Information Officer at the FCC. He's inbound from the U.S. General Services Administration's Federal Acquisition Service as the Deputy Assistant Commissioner for Category Management, in the Office of Information Technology Category.
TechFreedom Slams Content Vendor Diversity Report Idea
On Friday, RBR+TVBR shared with its readers details on why a Texas Congressman and 19 of his colleagues are urging the FCC to follow through with a petition for rulemaking calling for new data collection and reporting on the diversity of content vendors used by FCC-licensed media and telecommunications companies. TechFreedom couldn't disagree more, and says any FCC "Content Vendor Diversity Report" is "ill-conceived and burdensome."
FUSE’s FCC Diversity Call Gets Congressional Boost
A group of minority-owned media, civil rights and public interest groups on May 5 filed a petition for rulemaking at the Federal Communications Commission calling for new data collection and reporting on the diversity of content vendors used by FCC-licensed media and telecommunications companies. Now, a Texas Congressman and 19 of his colleagues have chimed in by urging the FCC to follow through with the rulemaking requested by FUSE and others.
FCC Regulatory Fees? Not Without Clear Authority
Does the FCC have the power to adopt “new regulatory fee categories” on non-licensees that nonetheless “benefit” from the FCC’s regulatory efforts? Non-partisan Washington think tank TechFreedom says no, and it voiced its opinion in Reply Comments filed earlier this week with the Commission in opposition to its FY2022 regulatory fee proposal, which the NAB is vociferously against for their substantial rate hike.
FCC Chairs of Yesterday and Today Opine and Shine
It’s become a much-anticipated annual event hosted by the Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council. This year, it was a virtual affair — one that saw Geoffrey Starks offer his thoughts on broadband access and internet connectivity issue as the MMTC 2022 Former FCC Chairs’ Symposium kicked off from Washington, D.C.
Bonner Bids Farewell To Starks’ Office
The Acting Chief of Staff and Legal Advisor for media and consumer protection issues for Democratic FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks is leaving for a role at the White House.
FCC’s Carr Says Farewell To Acting Legal Advisor
Michael Nemcik is no longer serving as Acting Legal Advisor for Republican-aligned FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr. He's held the role for the last several weeks, filling in for Danielle Thumann, but won't be leaving the FCC.












