Johnathan said:
In practice, it appears that the FCC has already waived the LPFM transfer/assignment rule by administrative fiat. The new rule might let groups sell an LPFM for "real money" however.
As you point out, they are already being traded. I guess this would keep some sellers from being included in the "Liar's Club."
Johnathan said:
I wonder how the "one to a customer" rule will be applied to M&M Community Development (aka JamCentral.com) and "Insert Religious Denomination Here" Of "Insert Community Here" applications.
The original R&O prohibited ownership of more than one LPFM for the first two years. After that, it was capped at a maximum of 10 stations. I don't think changing this to "one to a customer" is fair to those who signed on to the "original deal." Realistically a single LPFM can't cover many communities. There are lots of instances where more coverage is necessary.
I wouldn't have much of a problem with requiring the stations to be located in the same general geographic area. In fact, I'd favor that since it would favor localism. Even limiting the maximum number to 5 or even less might be acceptable, however I think the laws of physics and the reality of channel availability are fairly well self-governing. It would be hard to force fit 10 stations in most areas that could be considered a "community."
Johnathan said:
I would also love to see the definition of "repetitious, automated programming" - this one might get a few LPFMs in trouble.
That is going to be very hard to enforce. Just what constitutes "repetitious, automated programming?" Maybe we should ask the folks at Clear Channel or XM Satellite? If the programming is compelling enough to attract an audience, the station must be doing something right. Without automation, most LPFM stations could not stay on the air. Perhaps that is the Commissioner's intent?
Let's throw the LPFM folks a bone, but make it imposible for them to use it???
Johnathan said:
If they are going to expand the definition of "local" for rural areas, will they also license some LPFMs at 250 watts in these areas? After all, if a distant translator could run 250, why not an LPFM?
Good question. 250 watts at 200 feet is substantially more effective than 100 watts at 100 feet. 250 can actually do a decent job of serving many communities.
Johnathan said:
What does AM on FM TX have to do with LPFM, other than reduce the available number of FM channels for LPFM? I'd like to see AM broadcasters bound to the same local programming rules as LPFM if they want to use an FM TX (8 hours of local programming daily, programs broadcast no more than twice, nothing "repetitious/automated" allowed).
It looks like it is another win for NAB. Let's throw it in and see if anybody notices? It seems that many AM broadcasters think this is already a "done deal." Recently I've had phone calls from two AM broadcasters who wanted to know how to get a translator, or if I knew of any for sale.
If a translator is required to receive the originating signal off the air (that's the current rule for the commercial band stations), how does it do that if the originating station signs off at sundown? And who'd want to rebroadcast AM fidelity on FM. It sounds like some rules will need to be changed.
Johnathan said:
Isn't the Great Translator Invasion of 2003 already "out of the bottle"? How can the FCC put it back in now? They could delay all the FM translator MX groups and let potential LPFM operators apply for those channels, but are they really going to take away any translator CPs that are on the air, or that are granted on paper?
It is possible that they could retroactively put a cap on the number of applications they will grant as a provision to lifting the existing freeze. Taking a hard line approach, they might argue that applicants would need to accept the cap and maybe get something, or all frozen applications will be dismissed, leaving nothing.
The recent NCE Filing Window had a limit of ten applications. I think that is a reasonable number for parties on both sides of the argument. As you point out, there already exist many GTI translators that far exceed that maximum ownership cap. I don't know how you fix that. Perhaps the Commission grandfathers whatever has been awarded and moves on with a new cap. Any objections and the lawyers can figure it out. That's the American Way, isn't it?