I saw your post....but I believe you didn't cite anything to back it up. No matter hoe many underlines and BOLDS you type with. ;-)
Can you cite a case where a temporary waiver was applied for and denied?
Hard to believe that if, say, an AM tower fell, the licensee would be barred from servicing a community until they put a new tower up.
But what do I know. ;-)
P
As I said previously -- in the post you replied to! -- the FCC never grants a STA for a translator to operate on its own. If the associated AM is silent for technical reasons, the FCC considers the translator to be an extension of the AM license and it must also remain silent until the AM resumes operation.
@Wimmmex @K.M. Richards I've got evidence to back up what KM said.
There was an AM in Alexandria that had its tower crumbled in a storm, they asked for an STA to keep the translator on until they could get the AM back on with a longwire. The FCC said no. It may have been a verbal denial to get an answer post haste and not wait for electronic paper filing to go through