November 19, 2020

The Aftermath

Under a Biden administration, it seems that net neutrality will again be pursued.

Times are hard on broadcasters. Mounting competition from the tech giants, nonstop political turmoil, civil unrest, elections, market uncertainty and, of course, the COVID-19 pandemic have all swallowed 2020 whole — and we still have two months left! The election is over; however, President Donald Trump has yet to fully concede and only the Good Lord knows when that may be. The peaceful transition of power and the sharing of critical information is paramount to our democracy. When the smoke finally clears, the television industry will be anxious to see what direction the FCC will take.

The Trump administration and the FCC under Chairman Ajit Pai have generally followed a deregulatory trend. The repeal of net neutrality, loosening broadcast ownership restrictions under the Quadrennial Review and removing antiquated regulations — like the main studio and minimum staffing mandates — are just a few examples.

Under a Biden administration, it seems that net neutrality will again be pursued. It’s hard to imagine the benefits of having the FCC regulate internet services as a 1930s-style public utility under Title II regulations. That’s an innovation killer.

A Biden administration may also undermine the FCC’s appeal of the 3rd Circuit’s Prometheus Radio Project decision voiding the 2016 Quadrennial Review, which eliminated the newspaper/broadcast and television/radio cross-ownership rules and removed the eight voices test from the local television ownership rule. This appeal is particularly important for television broadcasters because they uniquely face overwhelming competition from the tech giants — Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple — and the titans of telco — AT&T, Verizon and Sprint/T-Mobile. Unless they are freed from the FCC’s Depression Era limits the industry will surely go the way of the newspaper industry and extinction.

The television industry also needs to see the deregulation of joint sales agreements and shared service agreements. In November 2017, the FCC under Chairman Pai repealed the attribution rules for TV JSAs, removing the Wheeler Era regulation that attributed such agreements as “ownership” interests under the duopoly limits. That decision was overturned in 2019 by the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals (along with other changes to the ownership rules noted above) and remanded the proceeding to the FCC for further consideration.

As one of the very few African American television operators, I know, firsthand, that the biggest obstacle to increasing diversity and minority ownership is access to financing and solid mentoring. Repealing limits on JSAs and SSAs will reduce that obstacle, allow new entrants to work with experienced broadcasters in the same market and expand ownership opportunities. The FCC for almost 50 years has given lip service to expanding diversity and minority opportunities, so I hope the FCC turns in that direction and allows the return of JSAs and SSAs.

Alas, we will have to wait and see what the future brings us when President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris are sworn on Jan. 20, 2021.

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