NAB Targets CTIA 'Smash and Grab' Auction Approach
The National Association of Broadcasters told the Federal Communications Commission that it should reject "smash and grab" arguments that focus only on repurposing spectrum and threaten to create a process that drives broadcasters "off a cliff." Instead, it said, the FCC should keep protecting TV broadcasters and their millions of viewers as it considers petitions to make broadcaster-backed changes to the broadcast incentive auction framework.
In a filing, NAB said that that CTIA: The Wireless Association's opposition to auction changes was essentially cheerleading for "abrogating the rights of broadcasters." That was the approach NAB branded "smash and grab" -- as in run roughshod over broadcasters in the rush to recover spectrum. NAB said broadcasters should not have to underwrite wireless companies' spectrum demands. NAB wants the FCC to treat the $1.75 billion Congress allocated to TV station (and some cable) post-auction repacking costs as a budget, and not reclaim any more spectrum than it can handle with that repacking budget. It also wants the FCC to make other changes that would insure broadcasters do not lose audience, that it not set an arbitrary deadline -- 39 months at the moment -- for broadcasters to exit their current channel in the repack, should complete international coordination with Canada and Mexico before the auction, and echoes its dislike of the variable band plan the FCC chose.
NAB Targets CTIA 'Smash and Grab' Auction Approach