Broadcaster Coalition Warns Of TV Study Problem
Broadcasters interested in putting their spectrum up for auction at the right price says that there is a potential issue with the way the FCC is calculating interference that could artificially decrease the value of stations and could lead to spending funds on relocating stations that might have been able to stay on their channel.
They are urging FCC to fix the problem before it creates problems for the issues.
Broadcasters not interested in selling are also concerned about the FCC's TVStudy software for calculating station interference as the FCC repacks stations into smaller space to make room for wireless broadband as well as whether the FCC will have enough money to pay all broadcaster moving expenses out of the $1.75 billion set aside for that purpose.
In a filing at the FCC, the Expanding Opportunities for Broadcasters Coalition, which represents 77 stations eyeing the auction, said the use of the TVStudy program was resulting in inconsistent results that could hurt both the incentive auction and station repacking after the auction.
Coalition executive director Preston Padden says in the filing that the FCC's May 2014 revision of TVStudy files has produced distortions in interference results that change a stations interference characteristics "by an implausibly large amount from one channel to the next," a phenomenon he points out the National Association of Broadcasters has documented in a filing last month at the commission.
Padden says the coalition believes part of the problem is the use of minimum effective radiated power levels (ERP's) to reproduce station signal contours and the way the FCC is calculating them based on an actual contour for an existing channel, for replicated contours for all the other channels, a replicated contour that is constrained by minimum power levels.
That, says the coalition, can create artificial distortions that will "both unnecessarily inconvenience broadcasters and result in needless expenditures of TV Broadcaster Relocation Funds."
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Contributing editor John Eggerton has been an editor and/or writer on media regulation, legislation and policy for over four decades, including covering the FCC, FTC, Congress, the major media trade associations, and the federal courts. In addition to Multichannel News and Broadcasting + Cable, his work has appeared in Radio World, TV Technology, TV Fax, This Week in Consumer Electronics, Variety and the Encyclopedia Britannica.