A draft FCC rulemaking notice on retransmission consent deals asks many questions about rules and practices covering the broadcast and pay-TV industries and draws few tentative conclusions, commission and industry officials said Friday. The notice circulated about 7 p.m. Thursday, FCC officials said. The agency confirmed that it’s on the tentative agenda for the March 3 meeting, as had been expected (CD Feb 8 p1). Cable, DBS and telco-TV companies and public interest groups had sought such a rulemaking, while broadcasters have said retrans works well now. Other media issues to be voted on at next month’s meeting are an order that may make it harder for radio stations to move and a rulemaking on video descriptions, agency officials said.
House Democrats may be headed for a split on Internet privacy issues. Two lawmakers offered bills that differ over tracking mechanisms. Rep. Bobby Rush, D-Ill., who was chairman of the former House Consumer Protection Subcommittee, reintroduced his bill setting up an opt-in system for data disclosure to third parties and safe harbors for companies participating in a self-regulatory opt-out system. Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., introduced two privacy bills Friday to protect consumers from tracking and put them in control of their financial information.
The FCC may have punted on contribution overhaul in its Universal Service Fund and intercarrier compensation rulemaking notice (CD Feb 9 p1), but some changes it proposes will lead to increased calls for taking up contributions sooner rather than later, said Bingham telecom lawyer Andy Lipman. The notice, approved 5-0 Tuesday, makes it clear that the commission wants to ease intercarrier compensation payments down, he said. “In part, that’s going to be made up with additional USF funding, which will in turn lead to more pressure on the fund, which in turn will create more pressure for contribution reform.”
A National Highway Traffic Safety Administration representative told the FCC’s Emergency Access Advisory Committee Friday that without a federal push there’s little chance a next-generation 911 (NG911) system will be interoperable. The committee was set up by the FCC to ensure that the network is fully accessible to people with disabilities.
The FCC is in discussions with Congress members who have raised security objections about the U.S. activities of Huawei and ZTE, fast-growing Chinese telecom vendors, a commission spokesman told us. The Public Safety & Homeland Security Bureau is taking the lead, and Chief James Barnett is the point person, but other commission bureaus and offices also are involved, said spokesman Robert Kenny. A Huawei executive on Friday called network security concerns based on his company’s Chinese origins nonsensical in the global economy and a misplaced reflection of broader tensions between the two countries.
The NCTA’s hunt for a new CEO is ramping up, with industry officials starting to float names, but with no list of candidates being evaluated by the cable association, executives watching the job search said. They said progress in finding a replacement for Kyle McSlarrow, who plans to leave this spring (CD Nov 11 p5), is at an early stage. Many member companies of NCTA haven’t been briefed on where the search stands, meaning that the day may still be a way off when a list of candidates for formal interviews is created, executives said. One cable executive said he and others wish they were more involved, while others said they're watching the search but haven’t been part of the discussion yet. Such involvement could come later.
A push to give the 700 MHz D-block to public safety gained steam Thursday. Homeland Security Committee Chairman Peter King, R-N.Y., introduced bipartisan legislation (HR-607) with Ranking Member Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., and five others. President Barack Obama called for D-block reallocation in a speech the same day. (See separate report in this issue.) But key members of the House Commerce Committee said they support a commercial D-block auction.
Sustaining community media and its adoption of multiple communications platforms must be achieved through better infrastructure, cable franchising and other policy priorities, community media leaders said at an event late Wednesday discussing a new report at the New America Foundation. A major threat is the public’s access to distribution infrastructure, said Joshua Breitbart, an analyst for the foundation’s Open Technology Initiative: “That threat necessitates a multi-platform approach to community media.” Public, educational and governmental (PEG) channels are increasingly taking advantage of new technologies and working across other forms of media, including mobile, wireless and cable, he said. “If there are challenges or losses in one platform, there are other opportunities for distribution."
President Barack Obama Thursday called for $10.7 billion to be dedicated to nationwide wireless public safety network, and $5 billion for a one-time upgrade to 4G wireless in rural America. Obama dedicated most of Thursday to wireless, flying to Marquette, Mich., where he viewed a WiMAX network installed at Northern Michigan University and spoke at the school to an enthusiastic audience standing in front of a sign that read “Winning the Future."
The FCC Media Bureau denied an experimental license application from low-power TV (LPTV) operator WatchTV that sought to test an OFDM-based broadcast transmission system popular overseas with an in-band broadband service. The applicants had complained the request wasn’t getting the attention it deserved (CD Jan 14 p4). But the request appeared to seek authority to introduce a new service that doesn’t comply with FCC rules and would appear to be more akin to a developmental license rather than an experimental license, bureau Chief Bill Lake wrote Watch TV Chairman Greg Hermann, who’s also president of the LPTV group Spectrum Evolution. Developmental licenses should be accompanied by petition for rulemaking, Lake wrote. “Where a new service would employ technology inconsistent with the existing ATSC standard, any rulemaking most likely would be accompanied by industry standards development."