The FCC’s net neutrality order became a small part of the larger federal budget game after the House Thursday night passed an amendment to the Continuing Resolution sponsored by Communications Subcommittee Chairman Greg Walden, R-Ore. Breaking mostly along party lines, the House voted 244-181 to approve the amendment. It would ban FCC implementation of net neutrality rules until the Continuing Resolution expires Sept. 30. A final vote on the CR was expected late Friday. The House also passed an amendment to cut the agency’s chief diversity officer. That position has been held by Mark Lloyd, who drew heat from the political right for what some thought was support of the fairness doctrine, which he said he never backed.
Moving AM and FM stations from rural to urban areas would become harder under a draft FCC order that also deals with tribal radio issues, agency and industry lawyers said. Among the many items tentatively set for a vote at the March 3 meeting (CD Feb 14 p6), the Media Bureau order circulated by Chairman Julius Genachowski sets up a rebuttable presumption against what are called move-ins, an agency official said. AM and FM stations seeking to change their community of license to reach a service contour that was half or more urbanized would need to make a case why they should be able to make such a move, FCC officials said.
The FCC is probing the representations of News Corp.’s Fox Television Stations in discussions it had with the agency over the pending and contested license renewal of WWOR-TV Secaucus, N.J. Media Bureau Chief Bill Lake on Thursday sent the a lawyer for the broadcast network a letter of inquiry saying it’s investigating whether Fox broke several rules by allegedly misrepresenting the extent of its news and operations. WWOR is the only full-power commercial station in New Jersey and is required to carry news serving the specific audience of the northern part of the state, rather than just its community of license, as is the case with all other U.S. TV stations.
A broad state role is critical to modernize and streamline Universal Service and Intercarrier Compensation policies, state members of the Federal-State USF Joint Board told an FCC workshop Thursday. Speakers debated proposed changes in fund size.
President Barack Obama’s broadband stimulus program was “vindicated” by new NTIA findings that up to two-thirds of America’s schools can’t get broadband at speeds they need, NTIA Administrator Lawrence Strickling. Thursday, the agency unveiled its new broadband map. The map indicated that up to 10 percent of Americans can’t get broadband. The map is based on more than 125 million searchable records in the new mapping database, with information from some 1,600 broadband companies. “All of these records can be analyzed in countless ways,” Strickling said. “But the data continues to show that a digital divide continues to exist."
Good oversight doesn’t include “wholesale attacks against agencies … for political purposes,” House Communications Subcommittee Ranking Member Anna Eshoo, D-Calif., told reporters Thursday. She rejected amendments to the Continuing Resolution -- debated Thursday -- that would affect FCC operations. Eshoo said at a media briefing that her priorities for this Congress include spectrum reform, overhaul of the Universal Service Fund and building a public safety wireless broadband network.
SAN FRANCISCO -- “The odds are we'll wait for a catastrophic event” for the U.S. government to impose cybersecurity requirements, said Mike McConnell, a former director of national intelligence. “I hope that doesn’t happen,” but it’s the usual pattern for action, he said at the RSA Conference late Wednesday. Legislation could give legal protections for measures to protect networks, in addition to imposing liability for lapses, said McConnell, an executive vice president of Booz Allen Hamilton.
Six consumer electronics companies and Google united to press the FCC to issue a delayed rulemaking on AllVid so all cable operators, DBS providers and telco-TV companies’ systems can connect to a wide array of CE equipment using inexpensive gateway devices. The AllVid Tech Company Alliance was formed Wednesday. It wrote FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski to lay out a case many of the members have been making to the regulator separately in recent months. They contend that multichannel video programming distributors aren’t doing enough to let their subscribers use devices other than those provided by those MVPDs to access over-the-top and pay-TV programming.
Having introduced a remote-storage DVR (RS-DVR) in its New York City system, Cablevision executives are looking at new products and service offerings the technology will let them introduce, they told investors Wednesday. Because the technology allows any digital cable box to function as a DVR, with storage taken care of at Cablevision’s headends, there are many possible new products, they said. “We could do free previews of DVR service. We could do very limited storage and include that as part of another package,” said Chief Operating Officer Thomas Rutledge. “Or we could expand the storage and sell that as an incremental price opportunity. There are a variety of ways of looking at the DVR currently in the market, breaking it into various components and selling it for less or more depending on how you put it together."
Some stimulus projects continue to face issues like environmental assessment, wage requirements and the procurement process, NTIA Administrator Larry Strickling said at the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners meeting Wednesday. But many projects are well under way and some major construction is expected this summer, he said.