NAB Suing FCC Over Ownership Rule Review
The National Association of Broadcasters is taking the Federal Communications Commission to court once again over its quadrennial media ownership regulatory review, the association has confirmed. “Broadcasters want to compete in the digital age and continue being a trusted source for local news and information, but FCC rules need to reflect 2016 and not the 1960s," said NAB spokesman Dennis Wharton. "It defies belief that the FCC allows AT&T/DirecTV and Charter/Time Warner mergers while barring two Topeka TV stations from combining, or a radio station from buying a newspaper.”
NAB signaled even before FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler circulated the proposal that it was likely headed to court, saying that retaining the newspaper-crossownership ban, as the FCC did yet again, was arbitrary and capricious violation of the Administrative Procedures Act. It has since gotten direction from the board to file suit. It has long said that it makes no sense to limit local TV station ownership in an era with video competition from cable and satellite and now the Web that fills those markets with competition voices. NAB is filing its appeal in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, the principal court of jurisdiction for FCC decisions. Prometheus Radio, which is also challenging the rules, filed in the Third Circuit.
NAB Suing FCC Over Ownership Rule Review