Thursday, May 28, 2015

Senate Bill Introduced To Grandfather TV Station JSAs

A bipartisan group of Senators introduced a bill earlier this month that would grandfather current joint sales agreements between TV stations, overturning an FCC rule that makes it harder for a TV station to sell advertising for another in the same market, according to KatyOnTheHill.com.

The FCC’s rule, passed in March last year in a party line vote, disallowed any TV joint sales agreements where the station sold more than 15 percent of the advertising time on a competing station.

The bill was introduced by Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) and co-sponsored by Sens. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) and Tim Scott (R-N.C.).

“Joint sales agreements in Missouri and across the country have helped save TV stations from going dark, increased program diversity, and enabled local news programming for many TV broadcasters,” Blunt said in a statement. “For instance, a JSA enabled a Joplin, Missouri station to upgrade its Doppler radar system, which helped save lives during the devastating tornado of 2011.”

The FCC has approved more than 50 such agreements, but decided to change its rules in March. In the FCC ruled stations had two years to unwind any joint sales agreements that exceed the newly imposed limits.  The STELA Reauthorization Act of 2014  delayed the FCC’s amendments to joint sales agreement (JSA) rules, giving  JSA parties an additional six months to comply with the amended rules.

FCC chairman Tom Wheeler has defended the rule, arguing they were an end-run around media ownership rules and hurt smaller companies trying to enter the business.

The rule has already led to stations having to go off the air, said GOP commissioner Ajit Pai who opposed the rule. “And that disturbing trend will only accelerate if scores of existing JSAs are terminated next year. For the sake of television viewers across the country, I agree with Sens. Blunt, Mikulski, Schumer and Scott that we should not let that happen.”

No comments:

Post a Comment