Hudson Valley Broadcasting Corporation v. Federal Communications Commission, Dutchess County Broadcasting Corporation, Intervenor

320 F.2d 723, 116 U.S. App. D.C. 1, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 5073
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 1963
Docket17310
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 320 F.2d 723 (Hudson Valley Broadcasting Corporation v. Federal Communications Commission, Dutchess County 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
Hudson Valley Broadcasting Corporation v. Federal Communications Commission, Dutchess County Broadcasting Corporation, Intervenor, 320 F.2d 723, 116 U.S. App. D.C. 1, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 5073 (D.C. Cir. 1963).

Opinion

J. SKELLY WRIGHT, Circuit Judge.

For many years the Federal Communications Commission has maintained a rule that commonly owned radio stations will not be licensed to serve the same area. 1 The Commission has described this rule as one of its “basic policies.” 2 In 1958 the Commission adopted the policy of encouraging all Class IV stations to increase transmitter power to a maximum of 1,000 watts. 3 It has termed implementation of this policy a “consideration overriding other considerations which would ordinarily be of decisional significance.” 4 This case arises out of a conflict between these two policies. 5

7. Background

The Commission in 1958 became concerned that the lower-powered Class IV 6 stations were not providing a satisfactory signal to the areas they were designed to serve. Several reasons appeared. Background electrical noise levels were increasing. Suburbs were spreading out, enlarging the size of the areas to be served. The Commission decided that the best solution to the problem of providing effective Class IV service would be to encourage all Class IV stations to increase transmitter power to the 1,000-watt maximum power permitted that class of station.

It was immediately recognized that for some stations a simple increase in transmitter power would result in violation of other Commission rules. The Commission decided against a blanket waiver of conflicting rules and declared it would adjust each conflict on a case-by-case basis. 7 Subsequently, the Commission resolved several of these conflicts. In 1960, in rule-making proceedings, it adopted a blanket waiver of the so-called 10 per cent rule which would otherwise prohibit the grant of an application if *725 the station would receive interference affecting more than 10 per cent of its primary service area. 8 In 1961 it adopted a rule providing for the simultaneous processing of Class IV transmitter power increase applications involving mutual interference, and automatic waiver of minor co-channel interference violations. 9

In the first Class IV applications involving the overlap of commonly owned stations, the Commission held hearings and issued detailed opinions, weighing the extent of the overlap against other factors. 10 However, in New Iberia Broadcasting Co., supra, Note 4, and in the present case, the Commission abandoned that approach and held the power increase policy to be paramount without a hearing and without discussion of the facts in the particular case.

II. This Case

Radio Stations WGNY of Newburgh, New York, and WKIP of Poughkeepsie, New York, about 15 miles away, intervenor here, are commonly owned. An overlap of coverage had been waived at the time they came under common ownership. Immediately prior to the application here in suit the overlap amounted to 210 square miles containing 40,181 persons 11 In 1961 WKIP, a Class IV station then operating at a power of 250 watts from a rooftop antenna, made application to increase transmitter power to 1,000 watts and to move its antenna to a ground location 2.25 miles away. According to the figures used by the parties, if this application were granted the overlap would be increased to 570 square miles or 80,646 persons, approximately double the pre-existing overlap. 12 Petitioner, operator of a competing station in Poughkeepsie, filed a petition to deny this application on the ground that it violated the Commission's rule on overlap of coverage of commonly owned stations. 13 Petitioner also requested a hearing on the application, alleging many facts tending to show the integrated nature of the communities of Poughkeepsie and Newburgh, making the overlap particularly undesirable. WKIP responded, admitting the overlap but generally contradicting the other factual allegations.

The Commission denied the application for a hearing and granted the WKIP application in its entirety. No findings of fact were made beyond a passing recognition that overlap would result. The Commission relied entirely upon the so-called Class IV policy, declaring that its effective implementation required that all stations be allowed to increase power equally, in the absence of “international considerations or other disqualifying matters.” 14

*726 Petitioner attacks the decision on two grounds: (1) the Commission failed to deal with the antenna change, an important part of the application, and (2) a hearing is required on the entire application to reconcile the conflicting overlap and power increase policies.

III. The Antenna Change

Petitioner alleged, and it was not seriously denied, that of the thirteen-fold increase in radiated power which would result from the grant of this entire application, 80 per cent is due to the antenna change, and only 20 per cent to the transmitter power increase. Antenna changes of this magnitude under Commission regulations would constitute a “substantial change” in facilities, requiring publication of the application to afford opportunity to interested parties to file objections. 15 Petitioner filed objections based on the overlap rule which prima facie would require rejection of the application. But the Commission granted the application without a hearing in an opinion which never mentions the antenna change and cites no authority which is pertinent to antenna change applications.

The Commission in brief attempts to justify this sub silentio approval of the antenna change on the ground that “the authority for Class IV stations to use-power of 1 kilowatt daytime is based on an assumption that they have efficient antennas.” (Emphasis supplied.) The-record in this case is directly contrary. When it appeared that the new antenna installation would result in a violation of a Commission rule against co-channel interference, the Commission wrote WKIP and suggested that it modify its antenna from its proposed efficiency of 270 mv/ m/kw to “a value which is consistent with that provided by the existing WKIP radiator” or 150 mv/m/kw. 16 Thus the Commission recognized that, even in relation to the Class IV power increase policy, other factors might require less than maximum efficiency antenna design. 17

Intervenor contends that the Commission’s Class IV decisions authorizing transmitter power increases also authorize antenna changes.

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Bluebook (online)
320 F.2d 723, 116 U.S. App. D.C. 1, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 5073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudson-valley-broadcasting-corporation-v-federal-communications-cadc-1963.