Renewal Expectancy In FCC Licenses

The views expressed here are mine and do not implicate current or former employers or clients.

Hundreds of Billions of Dollars have been invested in, and loaned to, commercial enterprises that operate pursuant to FCC spectrum licenses.  These include radio and TV stations, wireless carriers, satellite carriers and others.  It would come as quite a shock to these enterprises, and to their investors and lenders, to learn that, as some recently have asserted, the spectrum usage rights upon which their businesses depend are merely “a 30 day month-to-month lease” that can be yanked back at anytime by the FCC.  Fortunately for consumers and for our economy, that is not the case!

It is true that the Communications Act provides that licensees shall enjoy the use of, but not the ownership of, their licensed spectrum.  But as often is the case, recitation of this simple fact is the beginning, not the end, of the story.  Provisions of the Communications Act, FCC Regulations and FCC case law make crystal clear that absent bad conduct, FCC licensees are entitled to the legitimate expectation that their licenses will be renewed.  FCC licenses are not 30 day month-to-month leases.

For example, Section 309 (k)(1) of the Communications Act states that the FCC is required to grant a broadcast station’s application to renew its 8 year license if (A) the station has served the public interest convenience and necessity; and (B) the licensee has committed “no serious violations” of the Communications Act or FCC rules, or (C) no other violations that “taken together, would constitute a pattern of abuse”.  That is not a month-to-month lease.

Similarly, 47 CFR 1.949 specifies that wireless licenses shall be renewed if the licensee has met its build-out requirements by the deadline, continued service, and certified compliance with all FCC rules and policies and the Communications Act.

And, in a policy statement (In The Matter Of Assignment Of Orbital Locations To Space Stations In The Domestic Fixed Satellite Service, 3 FCC Rcd. 6972, n.31 (1988)) the FCC made it clear that satellite licensees also enjoy renewal expectancy (“given the capital-intensive nature of the domestic satellite industry, there should be some assurance that operators will be able to continue to serve their customers”).

The statutory, regulatory and case law provisions described above just scratch the surface of the very substantial legal and equitable rights of FCC licensees.  For example, Section 316 of the Communications Act, and case law under that section, severly restrict the FCC’s ability to modify or take back licenses.

The renewal expectancy afforded to all FCC licensees (except “bad actors”) is just common sense.  The essential services that the broadcast, wireless and satellite FCC licensees provide to consumers require substantial equity investment and debt financing.  That critical financial support would evaporate if, as some have asserted, the spectrum usage rights upon which these businesses depend could be yanked back by the FCC on 30 days notice.  In short, simply incanting the soundbite that “the airwaves belong to the public” does not begin to tell the whole story.

 

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s