I assume the FCC willl require AM, FM, TV stations to contunue
over the air broadcasting well into the future in order to serve
people who do not have internet, cable tv, satelllite radio---- tv.
With TV spectrum there are $$$ involved. Wireless companies are drooling over the UHF spectrum as smart phones and other bandwidth hungry devices proliferate. Wave lengths at FM and below are too long to be practical for mobile devices.
I pay every month for TV anyway--as do probably 90% of the viewers in my area. Can't get a thing off-air, even with the local TV station(s) only about 7 miles away. 3 network affiliates, co-owned, 1 full power, 2 low powers--all three blocked by terrain. So over the air TV could vanish and I, and many others, wouldn't notice.
I've also been skeptical about how the present UHF spectrum could be used for true mobile devices, but was thinking either fixed devices (in-home) or mobile devices with fixed antennas (cars). Or more spectrum for point to point, freeing up ghz frequencies now used. But there certainly is someone or someones with $$$ interested.
Digital radio in the U.K.: Is not a hybrid service like the U.S. but has its own band. About 175 to 240 mhz.
Where the heck do you live? At 7 miles, I'd think there would be plenty of signal sliding over the top of most terrain blockages...are you maybe getting too much signal?
If they can mandate Health Care, they can mandate anything....The FCC has been very clear that it will NOT mandate HD radio. The reason is because it's a licensed technology, and mandating it would be a financial windfall for the licensing company. They would also have to mandate all radios include HD receivers, and most manufacturers are opposed to it. It's not going to happen, and Congress is also against any mandates.