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REC Networks Warns LPFMs of Potential Displacement
The FCC’s full-service noncommercial educational (NCE) filing window earlier this month could result in the displacement of an existing LPFM station if there is an interference complaint from the proposed NCE station.
REC Networks is advising eight LPFM licensees to “closely watch the progress of new NCE applications and be prepared to take remedial action to change operations to a different channel as the result of a potential complaint by a new NCE station or highly intolerable incoming interference.” Low-power FM is considered a secondary service.
The NCE filing window, the first since 2007, included 20 reserved-band channels from 88.1 to 91.9 MHz.
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Michi Bradley, founder of REC Networks, stated on her website the FCC will not immediately shut down any LPFM as a matter of course once the full-service stations application is granted. However, if a complaint is sent to the FCC, the LPFM licensee must discontinue operations within 24 hours and only resume operations when directed to do so by the FCC, according to REC Networks.
“Unlike commercial stations, which must include a significant portion of the community of license within the 70 dBu City Grade contour, NCE FM stations operating on the reserved band channels (88.1– 91.9 MHz) are only required to place a 60 dBu contour over at least 50 percent of the designated community of license,” REC stated.
Here’s the list of potentially displaced LPFM stations:
- KAKU-LP Kahului, Hawaii
- KCWB-LP Crown King, Ariz.
- KEQQ-LP Grand Forks, N.D.
- KQLO-LP Clarksville, Ark.
- KTHN-LP Texarkana, Texas
- KWRK-LP Fairbanks, Alaska
- KXWR-LP Tsaile, Ariz.
- WKMP-LP Eastman, Ga.
- WYTC-LP Hyde Park, Vt.
LPFMs on second-adjacent channels of proposed NCE stations are not subject to displacement, according to REC.
The consulting group also placed another 19 LPFM stations on their “encroachment warnings” list for their co-channel and first-adjacent relationship with a proposed NCE FM. Those LPFM stations do not face displacement, but could potentially be operating within the interfering contours of a newly proposed full-service station. REC Networks notes those LPFM stations may or may not suffer incoming interference from the new NCE FM.
“The LPFM station must accept any incoming interference from those full-service stations, and they have no grounds to complain about a full-service station operating with their authorized facilities,” according to REC.
REC said a handful of low-power FM operators are seeking to secure a full-power noncommercial FM and in “most cases those LPFM stations have proposed their own channels.”
The FCC, which had more than 1,200 applications filed in the November NCE window, said it has begun to process NCE applications and is expected to announce winning bids that faced no competing applications. The FCC then will reach out to competing applicants with mutually exclusive applications and urge them to reach a settlement prior to completing the award process.
The FCC has said once the licensing of noncommercial FMs is completed, it expects to open another filing window for low-power FMs.
Comment on this or any article. Write to radioworld@futurenet.com.
The post REC Networks Warns LPFMs of Potential Displacement appeared first on Radio World.
Eric Luskin to Retire As APT Syndication VP; Successor Named
BOSTON — American Public Television (APT), the syndicator of content to U.S. public TV stations nationwide, is preparing for leadership changes in its Exchange, Syndication and Premium Service programming divisions.
The changes are prompted by the retirement of its Vice President of Syndication & Premium Service, and are effective December 17.
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A Legendary Radio Figure In Canada, U.S., Loses Alzheimer’s Battle
For a generation of radio listeners, thanks to the programming influence of Bill Drake and a woman described by the Detroit Free Press as a “golden-eared tastemaker,” CKLW — “The Big 8” — became the dominant Midwest and Central Ontario Top 40 station of its day.
From taking a part-time job as a weekend switchboard operator to her rise in 1967 to Music Director, there’s perhaps been no person more influential to popular music and its dissemination via broadcast media than Rosalie Tromblay.
Now, former listeners of The Big 8 and radio industry veterans from across North America are pausing to pay tribute to Tromblay, who has died of complications from Alzheimer’s Disease at the age of 82.
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Audacy Shares Dip To New 2021 Low
Just days after President/CEO David Field snapped up more shares of his company’s stock, Audacy Inc. stock on Wednesday continued its month-long downturn.
As the clock struck 1pm Eastern, AUD was down to a price last seen in late December 2020.
The price: $2.7250, reflecting a 4.4% dip from Tuesday’s trading.
If the closing price holds at this level, it would solidify a complete erasure of all 2021 share growth for the audio content and distribution company.
The latest dip sees Audacy Inc. shares fall by $1 per share since November 5, with AUD closing on that date at $3.75 per share.
Audacy’s market cap at 1pm was $385.5 million, and analysts maintain a $4.10 per share target price for AUD.
It was July 5 when Audacy stock was last at or near that price.
FCC to Host Video Programming Accessibility Forum
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Media Bureau, together with the FCC’s Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau, will co-host a forum on December 2 to explore the state of closed captioning availability for online video programming.
The event will also see participants discuss ways to enhance accessibility, including the Commission’s authority to adopt new rules.
Furthermore, the Forum will explore current and prospective best practices and other existing or possible voluntary efforts that could enhance the availability of closed captioning online.
FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel is scheduled to welcome Forum participants, while Senator Ed Markey (D-Mass.) will deliver keynote remarks.
The Forum will include two panels that will feature speakers such as television, cable, and online video programming distributors, academics and consumer advocates.
Additional details about the December 2 forum, including a full event agenda, can be found
here: https://www.fcc.gov/news-events/events/2021/12/video-programming-accessibilityforum-online-closed-captioning.
A Testy Wednesday On Tap For Sohn, Davidson
WASHINGTON, D.C. — With the nomination of Jessica Rosenworcel to formally take the Chair of the FCC unchallenged, the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation is expected to move forward with setting up a full Senate vote on President Biden’s pick to succeed Ajit Pai in a Committee markup session scheduled for Wednesday, December 1.
Once that markup concludes, get ready for some fireworks: Contentious FCC Commissioner nominee Gigi Sohn and National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) Assistant Secretary for Communications and Information nominee Alan Davidson will be teed up for consideration.
Their nominations are be among the most politically polarized and heavily scrutinized in ages.
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Cox Explains To FCC Why It Won’t Sell WPYO To SBS
WASHINGTON, D.C. — As promised on November 19 by noted Houlihan Lokey media broker Elliot Evers, administrator of the “CXR Radio Station Trust, lawyers representing Apollo Global Management-controlled Cox Media Group and the trust have filed its Reply Comments in what’s officially “Media Bureau Docket No. 19-98” in “a timely fashion.”
To little surprise, the stance that CMG, and Evers, are taking is largely defensive, expressing the belief that poor economic conditions present an opportunity with precedent for the Commission to extend a divestiture deadline tied to Apollo’s majority ownership acquisition of Cox Media Group.
Making the argument on behalf of Evers? David Oxenford.
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Inside the Nov. 24, 2021 Issue of Radio World
Chris Imlay has been a stalwart at the Society of Broadcast Engineers for four decades. He is about to retire from that role. Read what he told us about his career and his passion for a particular musical instrument.
Also, making magic online: Buyer’s Guide offers a roundup of tools helpful for podcasting, streaming and online content delivery. John Bisset shares a tip about T-R-R-S connectors. And David DeSpain shares some shortwave memories.
(Note that his issue contains preview coverage of the IBC show, which subsequently was canceled.)
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COLA Will Affect Some Public Broadcasters
A cost of living adjustment is pending to the compulsory license royalty rate paid by some public broadcasters in the United States.
The judges of the Copyright Royalty Board announced a cost of living adjustment to the rate that some noncommercial radio stations must pay for the use of published nondramatic musical compositions starting in 2022.
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The COLA affects certain colleges, universities and other educational institutions not affiliated with National Public Radio. The change affects the compositions in the SESAC repertory (the performance right organization) as it relates to the Copyright Act for noncommercial broadcasting.
The rates become effective starting Dec. 23, 2021. More information can be found in the Nov. 23, 2021 version of the Federal Register.
Comment on this or any article. Email radioworld@futurenet.com.
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Advocado Acquires VEIL Patents
A long-time licensee of VEIL technology, Advocado has acquired that technology and 46 other patents from VEIL Interactive Technologies, an affiliate of Koplar Interactive Systems International (KISI).
The company will integrate VEIL watermarking capabilities into its data-management platform for broadcast TV and radio, while also adding detection and attribution for interactive TV and gaming. This will enable advertisers, networks and media partners to measure more accurately ad effectiveness and consumer engagement across channels.
“For decades, VEIL has been the industry standard to verify billions of dollars’ worth of media spend,” stated Jeff Linihan, co-founder and COO of Advocado, in a release announcing the deal. “We can now offer the industry a non-biased, real-time attribution and campaign-coordination platform that’s capable of measuring next-generation media experiences, at scale.”
Following the acquisition, Advocado customers will gain expanded monitoring capabilities on cable and over-the-air television, with piloting on radio and streaming audio starting soon thereafter.
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Audacy, iHeart, Emmis, SiriusXM Sued Over Syndie Show Content
LOS ANGELES — Every Saturday at 10am, listeners to iHeartMedia-owned conservative Talker KEIB-AM 1150 “The Patriot” can gain a greater sense of investment opportunities in the energy sector by tuning to “The Smart Oil & Gas Radio Show.”
The program has also been heard on iHeart’s KTRH-AM 740 in Houston, on radio stations owned by iHeartMedia, Emmis Communications, and on SiriusXM Satellite Radio. The central figure behind the show happens to be barred by FINRA, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, from acting as a broker or otherwise associating with a broker-dealer firm.
This explains why a group of plaintiffs have sued the four audio media companies in a Dallas Federal District Court, arguing that they should be held liable, in some way, for airing programming tied to “a known fraud recidivist.”
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Additional Details on Section 230 Legislative Hearing Revealed
WASHINGTON, D.C. — House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Frank Pallone Jr. (D-N.J.) and Communications and Technology Subcommittee Chairman Mike Doyle (D-Pa.) are providing additional details on a “Section 230” legislative hearing.
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