Icbc Corporation v. Federal Communications Commission, Cbs, Inc., Intervenor

716 F.2d 926, 230 U.S. App. D.C. 275, 54 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 849, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 24308
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedSeptember 2, 1983
Docket82-1342
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 716 F.2d 926 (Icbc Corporation v. Federal Communications Commission, Cbs, Inc., 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
Icbc Corporation v. Federal Communications Commission, Cbs, Inc., Intervenor, 716 F.2d 926, 230 U.S. App. D.C. 275, 54 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 849, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 24308 (D.C. Cir. 1983).

Opinion

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge BORK.

BORK, Circuit Judge:

Appellant ICBC Corporation appeals from a decision of the Federal Communications Commission rejecting ICBC’s request for waiver of an FCC rule designed to prevent interference among AM radio stations. The waiver requested was necessary to allow filing of ICBC’s application for a license for nighttime service of its black-owned and black-oriented AM station, which has been operating only during the day since 1972. ICBC contended before the Commission that the rule should be waived because the proposed nighttime service would not adversely affect any area already receiving satisfactory service and would be consistent with the FCC’s own minority-ownership and minority-service policies.

The Commission refused to waive the allocation rule on the grounds that ICBC’s proposed violation was not warranted on technical grounds; that “service” considerations did not justify waiver of the rule; and that, in particular, ICBC’s status as a black-owned and -operated station providing service aimed at a black audience was not a “relevant factor” where this particular rule was concerned, because this rule, unlike others that had been waived for service-related reasons, was fundamental to the overall AM allocation scheme. We affirm the Commission’s decision.

I.

Appellant ICBC, the subsidiary of a company all of whose officers and directors and most of whose stockholders are black, currently holds the licenses for two radio stations in New York City that aim chiefly to serve black audiences: WBLS, an FM station, and WLIB, an AM station. Although WBLS operates round the clock, WLIB op *927 erates only during the day. WLIB, a “Class II” AM station, shares a frequency (1190 KHz) with a station in Fort Wayne, Indiana, which, as a “Class I-B” station, has dominant rights. Even though Fort Wayne is far enough away from New York to prevent any interference during the day, nighttime operation of WLIB would, because AM radio signals carry much farther at night, cause extensive interference between it and the Fort Wayne station.

In 1980 the FCC adopted changes that ICBC saw as an opportunity to extend WLIB’s service to nighttime hours. That year the Commission made available certain channels, called “clear channels,” each of which had previously been reserved for a single Class I-A station’s long-distance broadcasting. The Commission based its decision on the judgment that the need for local stations was not being adequately met, and it deemed the need for more minority-owned stations one of the major needs that the availability of new stations could meet. To encourage the creation of such stations, the Commission relaxed certain requirements for those new nighttime operations that were in markets already served by many local stations and that were more than fifty percent minority owned. The requirement of compliance with the basic signal contour rule of 47 C.F.R. § 73.37(a) (1982), however, was in no way relaxed. See Clear Channel Broadcasting in the AM Broadcast Band, 78 F.C.C.2d 1345, 1368-69 (1980).

One of the clear channels made available was 1200 KHz, a frequency on which the dominant Class I-A station was a station in San Antonio, Texas, which is far enough from the east coast of the United States to allow for licensing of at least one east coast station on 1200 KHz without creating significant interference. Because interference is created by stations not only on the same frequency but also on frequencies close to each other on the dial, WLIB, operating on 1190 KHz in New York City, was the only station in the New York City area that could be eligible for the 1200 KHz channel. ICBC filed an application with the Commission to change WLIB’s frequency from 1190 KHz to 1200 KHz and to extend its hours of operation from daytime only to round the clock. ICBC recognized, however, that WLIB’s proposed operation would interfere, in violation of section 73.37(a) of the Commission’s rules, with the signal of WCAU, a Class I-A station in Philadelphia operating at 1210 KHz.

Section 73.37(a) protects stations from interference by prohibiting the Commission’s acceptance of any application for a new operation that would infringe to a specified degree any existing station’s “signal strength contour.” Signal strength is designated in millivolts per meter, or mV/m, and a station’s 0.5 mV/m signal strength contour (or “signal contour” or “contour”), for example, is the area within which the station’s signal strength is 0.5 mV/m or greater. Section 73.37(a) specifies prohibited overlaps of signal contours for various combinations of existing and proposed stations, the prohibitions being strictest for stations on the same frequency and less strict for stations on nearby but not identical frequencies. As it applies to this case, section 73.37(a) would prohibit WLIB’s proposed operation because its 0.5 mV/m signal contour would overlap that of WCAU. It is undisputed that the overlap area measures approximately 450 square miles and has approximately five million residents.

In its request for waiver of section 73.-37(a), ICBC stated that grant of the waiver would make possible the survival of WLIB, which was New York City’s only black-owned AM radio station and which had not been financially successful operating only during the day. ICBC also stated that WLIB’s proposed operation would serve a black audience of more than two million people in New York and New Jersey. ICBC went on to argue that WLIB’s proposed operation “would not adversely affect WCAU in any area deemed to be served by that station under the FCC’s Rules.” Brief for Appellant at 10. ICBC noted that no part of the overlap area is within forty-five miles of Philadelphia and contended that WCAU does not purport to serve the New York area. Moreover, ICBC argued, no *928 WCAU listener would be deprived of adequate service because the entire area of overlap between WCAU and WLIB’s proposed operation is an “Urbanized Area,” under Commission rules, within which signals of less than 2.0 mV/m do not provide adequate service, and the 2.0 mV/m contour of WCAU would not overlap WLIB’s 0.5 mV/m contour at all. Finally, ICBC contended, even if some WCAU listeners would lose service from WCAU, they would not lose service entirely but rather would gain WLIB service, which would be directed at the New York (as opposed to Philadelphia) market where those listeners resided. In sum, ICBC requested waiver on the grounds (1) that licensing of WLIB’s proposed operation would advance the FCC’s policy of encouraging stations that are minority-owned or serve minority audiences and (2) that the infringing signal would not significantly affect WCAU’s primary service.

The Commission initially denied ICBC’s request for waiver in a letter returning ICBC’s application. J.A. 11-12. The Acting Chief of the AM Branch, Broadcast Facilities Division, Broadcast Bureau, stated in the letter that, “[i]n formulating Section 73.37(a), the Commission recognized that terms such as ‘service’ are relative and ambiguous.” J.A. 11. It was for that reason, he explained, that section 73.37(a) was adopted as a rule establishing “strict ‘go/no-go’ standards to which all applications must conform.” Id.

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716 F.2d 926, 230 U.S. App. D.C. 275, 54 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 849, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 24308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/icbc-corporation-v-federal-communications-commission-cbs-inc-cadc-1983.