Anibal Sotomayor v. Federal Communications Commission, Family Broadcasting Group, Marsona Broadcasting Corporation, Intervenor

721 F.2d 1408, 232 U.S. App. D.C. 247, 54 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 1451, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 15099
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 22, 1983
Docket83-1173
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 721 F.2d 1408 (Anibal Sotomayor v. Federal Communications Commission, Family Broadcasting Group, Marsona Broadcasting Corporation, Intervenor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anibal Sotomayor v. Federal Communications Commission, Family Broadcasting Group, Marsona Broadcasting Corporation, Intervenor, 721 F.2d 1408, 232 U.S. App. D.C. 247, 54 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 1451, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 15099 (D.C. Cir. 1983).

Opinion

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WALD.

WALD, Circuit Judge:

Aníbal Sotomayor applied to the FCC for a license to construct the first radio station to serve Adjuntas, Puerto Rico. He sought to compete under the Commission’s fifteen-mile rule, 47 C.F.R. § 73.203(b), with other applicants for the use of a channel assigned to the nearby city of Ponce. That rule permits persons proposing to operate in communities not listed in the FCC Table of Assignments to apply for the use of channels assigned to listed communities within fifteen miles. The staff rejected Sotoma-yor’s application because Adjuntas was listed in the Table of Assignments as a community to which a channel was currently assigned and thus did not come under the literal language of the fifteen-mile rule. The FCC upheld this initial determination and found further that Sotomayor’s application failed in any event to meet the FCC’s minimum distance requirements, from which no waiver was warranted. Because we find the FCC’s refusal either to amend the Table of Assignments or alternatively to waive the literal requirements of the fifteen-mile rule in Sotomayor’s case to be within its discretion, we affirm the rejection of Sotomayor’s application.

I. Background

Sotomayor applied to the FCC in September, 1980, for a license to operate an FM *1409 radio station on Channel 266, recently assigned to Ponce, Puerto Rico. He planned to operate the station in Adjuntas, a small community within fifteen miles of Ponce with no existing local radio service. He sought to invoke the FCC’s fifteen-mile rule under which unlisted communities — i.e., those not assigned a channel according to the Commission’s Table of Assignments— could apply for use of a channel assigned to a listed community within fifteen miles provided certain conditions were met. 47 C.F.R. § 73.203(b). 1 Although Adjuntas was a listed community, its assigned channel, Channel 275, had been licensed since 1968 to a station in Camuy, 23.2 miles from Adjuntas, under the “twenty-five mile rule,” an earlier version of the fifteen-mile rule. 2

Sotomayor also sought a waiver of the FCC’s minimum distance requirements, which are designed to prevent interference between stations on the same or adjacent channels. He claimed that no channel was available to serve Adjuntas other than Channel 266. Because Station WKSA-FM in Isabella, Puerto Rico, operated on a second adjacent channel, Channel 268, FCC regulations required that Sotomayor’s station be located at least forty miles from the transmitter of the Isabella station. 47 C.F.R. § 73.207(a). 3 However, Sotomayor could locate no site that would serve Adjun-tas and yet meet the forty-mile requirement. His proposed site was located thirty-three miles from the Isabella transmitter. J.A. 4. He submitted an engineering study showing that, because of factors such as terrain and transmitting power, the interference resulting from his “short-spaced” site would be no more severe than would result from the location of two facilities operating at the maximum allowed power level and located the prescribed forty miles apart. J.A. 4.

The FCC staff returned Sotomayor’s application in December, 1980, as unacceptable for filing, applying literally the requirements of section 73.203(b), which permitted only unlisted communities to remove a channel from a listed community. J.A. 59. Sotomayor petitioned for reconsideration, arguing that the Table of Assignments was incorrect and that the FCC had a common practice of correcting the Table to reflect the use in one community of a station assigned to another community. 4 He also pointed out that no other channel was available to Adjuntas and that the Camuy station was located at such a distance from *1410 Adjuntas that it did not serve that community. J.A. 64-68. In November, 1981, the Chief of the Broadcast Bureau denied the petition for reconsideration and designated four applications for a comparative hearing. J.A. 117,125. Sotomayor applied to the full Commission for review of the rejection of his application. All three remaining applicants 5 for Channel 266 filed memoranda in opposition to Sotomayor’s request. Before the Commission acted on Sotomayor’s application, however, the comparative hearing was held and one of the applicants, Family Broadcasting Group, was granted a construction permit for a station on Channel 266 in an initial decision in September, 1982, by an Administrative Law Judge. J.A. 186. On December 8,1982, the FCC denied Soto-mayor’s application for review. Aníbal So-tomayor, 52 Rad.Reg. (P & F) 1529, 1533 (1982); J.A. 210. The Commission based its denial primarily on its policy of considering requests for correction of the Table of Assignments only in the context of rulemak-ing, not in the license application process. The Commission added that Sotomayor had failed to justify a waiver of the minimum distance requirements set out in section 73.-207. Sotomayor appeals from the Commission’s order.

II. Issues

A. The Fifteen-Mile Rule

In its decision rejecting Sotomayor’s application, the FCC explained its policy of considering amendments to the Table of Assignments only in the context of rule-making proceedings:

[T]he Commission has a valid interest in ensuring that, when a proceeding is instituted considering the assignment of a channel, all such effects that assignment would have on service to all other communities in the area be taken into account, and that the proceeding be thorough, fair and conclusive. Thus, it is not too harsh to require all affected parties to present their arguments at one time so that others may be put on notice of their interests and so that the Commission may have the greatest flexibility in reaching a reasoned decision.

Aníbal Sotomayor, 52 Rad.Reg. (P & F) at 1532; J.A. 198. Sotomayor argues that the FCC does not have a consistent policy of considering amendments to the Table of Assignments only in rulemaking proceedings, and that the assertion of this policy to exclude his application exalts form over substance and gives insufficient weight to the importance of providing first service to Adjuntas, a factor that the Commission has a statutory responsibility to consider. 6

Sotomayor points to an FCC decision issued after its decision in his case, Hispanic Owners, Inc., et al., 53 Rad.Reg.2d (P & F) 1263 (1983), in which the Commission agreed to consider a request to waive the *1411 express requirements of section 73.203(b) in a license application proceeding rather than require a petition for rulemaking. In

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721 F.2d 1408, 232 U.S. App. D.C. 247, 54 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 1451, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 15099, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anibal-sotomayor-v-federal-communications-commission-family-broadcasting-cadc-1983.