There's “overwhelming opposition” across the radio industry to the Geobroadcast Solutions (GBS) proposal to allow geo-targeted radio, iHeartMedia told an aide to FCC Commissioner Nathan Simington in a call last week, according to an ex parte filing posted in docket 20-401 Friday. NAB and several broadcasters filed comments in opposition to the proposal, but numerous smaller broadcasters and the Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council supported the technology (see 2102100055). IHeart has concerns about “the nature of the testing that has occurred thus far, the lack of listener evaluation data, and the negative impact on listeners of increased interference should this technology be deployed,” the filing said. “Approving this proposal would put additional competitive pressures on radio stations across the industry.” "Our proposal before the FCC seeks to put radio on a progressive track both technologically and monetarily, and in-line with other mediums," emailed a GBS spokesperson. "It would be an elective enhancement for any station interested in a geo-targeted offering for its listeners and advertisers and would wholly benefit the industry."
Modifications to the FCC’s servers may have caused hyperlinks in broadcaster online public files to stop working, said a blog post Thursday from Fletcher Heald. “The hyperlinks currently direct viewers to a webpage that reads as follows: ‘We’re Sorry. We couldn’t find the page you were looking for,” said the post. “To resolve this issue, broadcasters who maintain public files should update the on-line public file hyperlink on their website homepage as soon as possible,” said the law firm. Broadcasters are obligated to have functioning links in their online public files, Fletcher Heald said. "The FCC experienced a technical issue just prior to Thanksgiving that affected its Online Public Inspection File system," an FCC spokesperson emailed. "The issue has been resolved as of December 1." The Alabama Broadcasters Association warned members about the glitch in a message earlier this week. "Apparently, the Commission while doing maintenance on the OPIF [online public inspection file] site last week, changed the way the link works," said the ABA.
An FCC hearing proceeding on possibly revoking the license of a Pennsylvania broadcaster convicted of attempting to have a woman raped was terminated after he didn’t respond to the agency (see 2110190056), said an order in docket 21-401 from Administrative Law Judge Jane Halprin Wednesday. The termination of the hearing for Roger Wahl, licensee of WQZS(FM) Meyersdale, kicks the matter back to the FCC, which is likely to revoke the license, a broadcast attorney told us. Wahl didn’t file an appearance with the FCC by Monday's required deadline and didn’t petition to have the hearing dismissed, the order said. “Because Mr. Wahl has not filed the required notice of appearance or other permissible pleading, his right to a hearing in this matter is deemed waived,” said the order. Wahl pleaded guilty in July 2020 to the felony crime of criminal use of a communications facility and four misdemeanors involving the incident. He had sought to transfer the station to his daughter Wendy Sipple, which the bureau initially granted and then rescinded in July 2020. Wahl’s application to transfer the station remains pending. Wahl and WQZS didn’t comment.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit denied broadcaster Chinese Voice of Golden City’s appeal of FCC rulings (see 2011250062) that it violated agency rules by operating a low-power FM station from an unauthorized location and then filing an application to modify the license without disclosing that the station was already operating from the modified location. “Chinese Voice by its own admission broadcast from an unauthorized location more than two miles from its licensed site for about fifteen months,” wrote the three-judge panel of Nina Pillard, David Tatel and Robert Wilkins in an unpublished order released Tuesday in appeals docket 20-1514. Unauthorized transmissions don’t count as broadcast signals, the panel said. “Because Chinese Voice failed to transmit broadcast signals for a consecutive twelve-month period, it forfeited its license.” The FCC’s prior decisions to take Golden City’s license and require the broadcaster to disclose the violation in future applications were “reasonable and reasonably explained,” the court said. “Chinese Voice repeatedly obscured its purposeful fifteen-month relocation, including before this court,” the order said.
The 60-day settlement process to resolve mutually exclusive applications from the recent noncommercial educational FM station application window began Monday and stretches to Jan. 28, said an FCC Media Bureau public notice Monday. A freeze on amendments to NCE FM applications -- enacted for the NCE window -- was also lifted Monday at 6 p.m., the PN said. The Media Bureau received 1,282 applications for new NCE FM stations during the window, which closed Nov. 9 (see 2110290060), and has found 231 mutually exclusive groups, involving 831 of the applications. Thirteen applications were dismissed for having “numerous significant and egregious technical defects,” such as violating treaties with Mexico and Canada, the PN said.
Foundation for a Beautiful Life has appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit the FCC’s repeated rejections of its broadcast applications, said a filing (on Pacer) Tuesday. The full commission denied FBL’s applications for review in October (see 2110250050). The matter concerns a low-power FM station constructed by FBL several miles from the location where it was licensed. The FCC’s decision was “not sufficiently supported by evidence in the record” and is “arbitrary and capricious,” FBL said.
The CXR Radio Station Trust “should not be forced through an inflexible regulatory deadline to sell the Stations at fire sale prices,” said CXR, in a reply posted in docket 19-98 Wednesday on the trust’s request for an extension on a Dec. 17 deadline to sell two FMs divested as part of the Terrier/Cox deal (see 2111220059). “Political pressure” from trade-press articles and testimonials from public officials shouldn’t drive FCC decision-making on granting the extension, CXR said. Spanish Broadcasting Systems' valuation of the stations is based on recent sales affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, said CXR. “The deal market in 2020 and 2021 was basically non-existent.” The few transactions “were for AM stations and non-performing FM stations with most of them sold to religious programmers buying for 'stick' value, not commercial operators interested in going concerns.” The CXR stations are “materially different,” the filing said. “They both have ratings, revenue and cash flow.” CXR wants the one-year extension to conduct a multiple-round bidding process for the stations.
The Media Bureau reached a $1,000 settlement with an Illinois school district over incorrect FCC filings and a long period of silence for School District #99’s WDGC-FM Downers Grove, Illinois, said a consent decree listed in Monday’s Daily Digest. The station incorrectly certified on a license renewal application that it hadn’t been silent for 12 months and didn’t notify the FCC on time of the discontinued operations, though the agency granted it special temporary authority to go silent in 2019 and then two extensions due to technical issues and the COVID-19 pandemic, the consent decree said. WDGC also didn’t submit biennial ownership reports and equal employment opportunity program filings on time, the consent decree said. The bureau rejected an informal objection to the station's renewal application, saying that it's within discretion to extend the station's STA.
Two Florida Democrats, Reps. Charlie Crist and Darren Soto, weighed in on the FCC extending the Dec. 17 deadline for CXR Radio Station Trust to sell off radio stations divested as part of the Terrier/Cox deal, said letters posted in docket 19-98 Monday. CXR has asked for more time but would-be purchaser Spanish Broadcast Systems said CXR has rejected multiple offers from SBS for WPYO(FM) Maitland, Florida (see 2111180069). If the FCC were to grant the extension "based on unsupported claims about the unsatisfactory state of the market -- claims that are undermined by the fact that CXR has received a viable offer from an established radio operator,” it would undercut the purpose of radio ownership rules, Soto wrote. CXR “is under an obligation to consummate the sale of the stations as soon as reasonably practicable,” wrote Crist. Under SBS, WPYO would be the first and only Hispanic-owned station serving Orlando, Crist said.
Comments are due Dec. 13, replies Dec. 23, on Auction 112, which involves construction permits for 27 full-power TV stations and is set for June, said a public notice Friday in docket 21-449. The permits are for channels that have been allotted but for which there isn’t a current licensee, the PN said. The allotments include stations in Syracuse; Great Falls, Montana; and Flagstaff, Arizona.