The FCC Media Bureau approved a temporary waiver...
The FCC Media Bureau approved a temporary waiver of newspaper/broadcast cross-ownership (NBCO) rules and the license renewal application for Fox’s WWOR-TV Secaucus, New Jersey, over objections from public interest groups, said an order Friday (http://bit.ly/1uwy44J). The NBCO waiver is necessary…
Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article
Timely, relevant coverage of court proceedings and agency rulings involving tariffs, classification, valuation, origin and antidumping and countervailing duties. Each day, Trade Law Daily subscribers receive a daily headline email, in-depth PDF edition and access to all relevant documents via our trade law source document library and website.
to allow Fox to own both the station and the New York Post, the order said. In several petitions to deny and objections to the waiver and WWOR’s renewal, Free Press, United Church of Christ and Voice for New Jersey said WWOR had not fulfilled its obligation to serve northern New Jersey, the order said. Public interest groups had also accused Fox of misrepresenting how much northern New Jersey news and content the station was broadcasting (CD Feb 18/11 p6). The bureau concluded that any misrepresentations were “unintentional and harmless errors.” “Whether the station might have selected different stories to cover or presented its stories using different formats is not a part of our review,” said the order. “It is well-settled law that the Commission does not substitute its own editorial judgment for that of a licensee.” The bureau’s decision “whitewashed Fox’s abject failure to meet the needs of Northern New Jersey,” said Georgetown Law Institute for Public Representation Senior Counselor Andrew Schwartzman, who represented Voice for New Jersey in the matter. Fox’s NBCO waiver is temporary, pegged to the commission’s 2014 quadrennial review proceeding, the order said. Fox will have 90 days after the effective date of a 2014 quadrennial review order that either adopts a new NBCO rule or upholds the existing one to either come into compliance or request another waiver, the order said.