While one of the big issues facing the FCC is ownership, there are many others like the "never visited" public files and EEO record keeping and submission.
In particular, some of the major complaints about regulation are not even FCC mandates. Here is attorney David Oxenford's comment on those:
I’ve heard some suggest that political broadcasting rules should be changed. But most of the FCC-administered political broadcasting obligations are imposed by statute, not by FCC rule. The FCC cannot significantly change these obligations without the intervention of Congress. So lowest unit rates, equal opportunities, no censorship, and the political file rules for candidates and issue advertisers are likely here to stay absent Congressional intervention.
For a full commentary on possible areas of FCC rule changes, see this post:
In particular, some of the major complaints about regulation are not even FCC mandates. Here is attorney David Oxenford's comment on those:
I’ve heard some suggest that political broadcasting rules should be changed. But most of the FCC-administered political broadcasting obligations are imposed by statute, not by FCC rule. The FCC cannot significantly change these obligations without the intervention of Congress. So lowest unit rates, equal opportunities, no censorship, and the political file rules for candidates and issue advertisers are likely here to stay absent Congressional intervention.
For a full commentary on possible areas of FCC rule changes, see this post:
Less Than a Week to Go Before “Delete, Delete, Delete” Proposals on Eliminating Unnecessary FCC Regulations Are Due – What Should Be Included?
A few weeks ago, FCC Chairman Carr announced the beginning of the “Delete, Delete, Delete” proceeding at the FCC - looking at “alleviating unnecessary
www.broadcastlawblog.com
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