The FCC released the final ATSC 3.0 NPRM, which was approved Thursday by a unanimous vote. The item seeks comment on a proposed voluntary transition plan for broadcasters to move to transmitting in the new standard (see 1702230060).
Bayou City Broadcasting closed on its $40 million buy of Fox affiliate KADN-TV Lafayette, Louisiana, and low-power TV NBC affiliate KLAF-LD Lafayette from Nexstar Broadcasting, according to FCC online records and a news release from the National Association of Black-Owned Broadcasters. The stations are divestitures connected to Nexstar buying Media General (see 1605270060). “Even though constituting 14% of the total population, African Americans own only 12 full power commercial television stations out of the 1300 full power commercial television stations in the United States,” said NABOB: The broadcaster “has no joint sales agreements, shared service agreements, financing agreements, or any other ‘sidecar’ agreements with any group station owners.” The group called the company "a standalone operation.”
The FCC Media Bureau granted a request from Australian-owned Frontier Media to be allowed to increase its ownership of 29 Alaska and Texas radio stations to 100 percent, said an order and ruling in Friday's Daily Digest. Australians Richard and Sharon Burns owned 20 percent of the stations, but the deal approved Thursday allows them to own 100 percent. Frontier’s request was unopposed, and the bureau found it to be in the public interest. Granting the petition would “increase the likelihood of continued service to small communities by authorizing investment by individuals who are ready, willing, and able to operate the stations,” and “facilitate foreign investment in the U.S. broadcast radio market” among other positives, the order said. It requires Frontier obtain prior commission approval for any change in its ownership “before any individual foreign investor" or “group that is not specifically approved by this Declaratory Ruling acquires a direct or indirect voting or equity interest in Frontier.”
DTS parent Tessera changed its name to Xperi, with the Nasdaq ticker symbol XPER, effective Thursday, it announced. The change reflects the company’s “expanded capabilities, continued technological innovation and refined vision,” it said Wednesday. Tessera in September in a $850 million deal (see 1609200027) bought DTS, which itself bought HD Radio developer iBiquity for about $170 million.
The Incentive Auction Task Force and the Media Bureau will host a workshop on the post-auction broadcast transition March 13, the FCC said in a public notice. “The workshop will include presentations and panels by Commission staff focusing on post-auction procedures.” More details to come.
The FCC Enforcement Bureau issued a pair of forfeiture orders against California pirate radio operators Thursday for allegedly continuing to broadcast despite repeated warnings. Nelson Quintanilla was fined $25,000 for operating an unlicensed radio station on 95.1 MHz in Panorama City and Iglesia el Remanente Fraternidad Elim Inc. and Belarmino Lara were issued a fine of $25,000, “jointly and severally” for operating an unlicensed radio station on 93.7 MHz in Arleta.
The full FCC dismissed a December application for review (AFR) from Delta Radio Network challenging the Media bureau’s previous dismissal of a facilities modification application, said an order Thursday. It was approved by commissioners as part of the consent agenda for their meeting that day, and removed from the meeting lineup when it was OK'ed beforehand. The facilities modification application was dismissed because DRN’s application had a “red light” status, indicating DRN was delinquent on a debt owed to the FCC. DRN argued the red light designation should have been ignored because the company was in bankruptcy proceedings. The bureau argued DRN’s bankruptcy petition was dismissed and moot. In the AFR, DNR repeated the bankruptcy argument and said the agency should grant waivers of red light status to broadcasters losing money in their operations, the order said. The bureau dismissed the waiver argument as a new legal argument and thus not valid for an AFR, and dismissed the bankruptcy argument as moot again, the order said.
The FCC improperly reviewed the UHF discount on its own instead of considering it along with the national TV ownership cap, Nexstar CEO Perry Sook said in meetings Tuesday with Chairman Ajit Pai, Commissioner Mike O’Rielly, Commissioner Mignon Clyburn, and Media Bureau acting Chief Michelle Carey, according to an ex parte filing. Local TV stations compete with “multitudes” of other communication media, Sook said. He was also critical of the top-four ownership rule and the eight-voices test, saying neither reflects an accurate view of the broadcast marketplace. Sook also spoke on ownership diversity, and in support of efforts to increase minority ownership, the filing said. Sook said he supports the minority tax certificate and is open to a minority incubator program advocated by Clyburn, the filing said. The agency may soon restore the UHF discount, over the objection of Commissioner Mignon Clyburn (see 1702210027).
Triveni Digital will market a series of ATSC 3.0 "starter kits" that will bring broadcasters "up to speed” with the next-generation TV standard in a "real-world environment," the company said in a Wednesday announcement. The kits will be introduced throughout the year and “encompass everything from file-based monitoring to live encoding and over-the-air transmission options,” it said. Triveni plans to demonstrate the kits for the first time at the NAB Show in late April, where it will exhibit in the Las Vegas Convention Center’s North Hall, it said. Triveni Chief Science Officer Rich Chernock chairs ATSC’s Technology Group 3, which is supervising ATSC 3.0's framing.
FCC updates to its catalog of reimbursable expenses are effective as of Tuesday, said Tuesday’s Federal Register. Updates include a provision tying the costs in the catalog to a price index to allow for cost changes over time (see 1702090053).