Industrial Broadcasting Company v. Federal Communications Commission, Wsm, Inc., Intervenor
This text of 437 F.2d 680 (Industrial Broadcasting Company v. Federal Communications Commission, Wsm, 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.
Opinion
Appellant, the licensee of a Class II AM radio station (KIKK) in Pasadena, Texas, brings this appeal from a decision of the Federal Communications Commission denying it a waiver of the so-called “pre-sunrise rules.”
This controversy stems from the natural phenomenon which causes radio waves to travel further distances at night than during the day, thereby interfering with the signals of local stations during the nighttime hours and depriving local listeners of high quality reception. The Commission has attempted to combat this disruptive situation by creating radio frequency allocation patterns designed to keep this interference at a minimum. 1 One method of allocation is to restrict nighttime service on certain frequencies (Clear Channels) to one station of high power. Those stations which are so permitted to continue broadcasting throughout the night are referred to as Class I stations. Conversely, most other stations assigned to the same frequency, but restricted to daytime service, are called Class II stations.
Since true daytime conditions do not exist until two hours after sunrise, most Class II stations have been restricted by the terms of their licenses from beginning operations until well after the predawn hours. However, because these pre-dawn hours became so popular, in 1941 the Commission fashioned an exception to this restriction (47 CFR § 73.87(9) (2)). Class II stations were permitted to commence operations at 4:00 A.M., except for those located to the west of a Class I station operating on the same frequency. This latter group of Class II stations, of which KIKK is a member, was prohibited from operating prior to the time of sunrise at the easterly Class I station on the same frequency.
In 1967, the Commission instituted rulemaking proceedings in order to reexamine the exceptions pertaining to predawn operations. Presunrise Operation by Standard Broadcast Stations, 8 F.C. C.2d 698, aff’d, WBEN, Inc. v. United States, note 1 supra. The impetus for this reexamination stemmed from numerous allegations by many full-time stations that their signals were being interfered with by an increasing number of daytime-only stations utilizing the pre-dawn exceptions. Upon consideration of various proposals, the Commission adopted a rule requiring Class II stations located to the west of Class I stations, such as KIKK, to refrain from operation until 6:00 A.M. local time or sunrise at the dominant Class I station, whichever is later. 2 Moreover, the Com *682 mission required that any station intending to utilize this exception must seek Pre-Sunrise Authority (PSA) from the Commission. The Commission also announced that in due course it would reexamine these policies, with special emphasis to be placed upon the determination of whether PSA-authorized stations should be required to operate at less than full daytime power during their pre-dawn operations.
Accordingly, the Commission reinsti-tuted proceedings in July, 1969. Pre-sunrise Operations, 18 F.C.C.2d 705 (1969). Aside from exploring the problems concerning broadcast power, the Commission also entertained fresh objections concerning the existing pre-sunrise exceptions from a myriad of Class II stations. 3 Three arguments were made as to why these exceptions should be widened: The Commission had (1) utilized inappropriate engineering statistics to gauge the extent of interference; (2) failed to utilize listener complaints as a serious barometer of the degree of interference; and (3) not considered the importance of programming in the development of these rules.
The Commission, however, endorsed the procedures it had established in 1967. The objections to the engineering statistics employed were met by a finding that the same results would be reached using any of the standards proffered by the various Class II stations. Of the argument that the absence of interference complaints from the listening public could be considered as a significant decisional factor, the Commission stated that many listeners had become adjusted to poor reception during the early morning hours, believed that such interference was a “way of life”, and thought that no better service could be provided. The Commission further explained that the purpose of the pre-sun-rise rules was not simply to maintain the status quo, but to improve the quality of radio reception beyond what the public had come to expect. In response to the third argument, the Commission explained that little weight could be given to “unique” programming in resolving what was essentially a highly technical problem of frequency allocation.
Appellant is authorized to operate only in the daytime in Pasadena, Texas, a city contiguous to Houston. Since its inception 22 years ago, KIKK has been required by the terms of its license and by the Commission’s rules to conduct its operation in such a manner as not to interfere with Station WSM, Nashville, Tennessee. WSM was the only station on that frequency permitted to operate throughout the night, and in that capacity served large sections of the southeastern and southwestern portions of the country. Despite KIKK’s restrictions, however, an FCC field office inspection conducted in September, 1969, uncovered the fact that KIKK had been regularly broadcasting at 6:00 A.M. local time, which was prior to sunrise in Nashville during the fall and winter months.
Shortly after this discovery, KIKK applied for and received a PSA consistent with the terms of the rule, that is to say, a sign-on time of 6:00 A.M. or sunrise at Nashville, which ever occurs later. 4 KIKK also requested a waiver of the rule to permit a 6:00 A.M. sign-on throughout the year. In its application for this waiver, KIKK raised the same three issues which had been considered by the Commission at the rulemaking *683 proceeding a few months before. With regard to the issue concerning the failure of the Commission to consider programming, KIKK maintained that it was the only English-speaking station in Pasadena, and that its early morning broadcasts were, accordingly, important to the English-speaking population of Pasadena.
The Commission denied KIKK’s waiver application, finding that KIKK was simply seeking a relitigation of matters which had already been resolved in the recently completed rulemaking proceeding. In addition, the Commission again emphasized that, under any method of engineering computation, KIKK would be shown to interfere with WSM “throughout all or portions of [ten] states.” With regard to KIKK’s programming claim, it was noted that there were
“20 unlimited English language and broadcast services * * * in the Houston metropolitan area, of which Pasadena is a part. Under these circumstances, KIKK’s status as Pasadena’s only English language station is not a valid reason for removing operating constraints * *
It is now claimed by appellant that the Commission did not fully consider its arguments, and that, at the very least, an evidentiary hearing should have been accorded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
437 F.2d 680, 20 Rad. Reg. 2d (P & F) 2122, 141 U.S. App. D.C. 247, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 5941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-broadcasting-company-v-federal-communications-commission-wsm-cadc-1970.