
![]()
|
ENTER LOW POWER AM!! By Don Schellhardt
In the last edition of this column, we reported that two
groundbreaking Petitions For Rulemaking have been filed with the FCC.
Both Petitions were filed with the FCC’s Office of the Secretary,
via the Commission’s
Now, we can report that additional action was taken, on
December 5, to advance one of these Petitions: the
Petition For Rulemaking, filed by Fred Baumgartner, C.P.B.E. of
THE LPAM TEAM is chaired by Kyle Drake of
**** NOW
the FCC’s Localism Task Force needs to hear from OTHERS who support Low
Power AM …
and/or translator and Service Status reform for Low Power FM
… and/or
action to offset the effects of interference from In Band On Channel (IBOC)
Digital Radio …
and/or repeal of third adjacent channel spacing requirements for
Low Power FM.
To this end, a SUPPLEMENT to this article sets forth A “MODEL”
FILING you can use as a starting point for your own Written Comments in
Docket RM-10803. To
make it easier, the filing uses a letter format.
“Take
what you want and leave the rest”, but please file SOMETHING.
****
In its own Joint Written Comments of December 5, THE LPAM TEAM
endorsed the Baumgartner LPAM Petition.
However, the group also offered several recommendations for
improving the Baumgartner proposal. These
recommendations include the following: 1.
Establish a Primary Service
Status for LPAM stations to protect them from being displaced by
new or relocating full power stations. 2.
Eliminate the Petition’s
proposed requirement that 60% or more of an LPAM station’s air
time must be manned, rather than automated
-- adopting
instead the current “minimum locally
originated content” requirement for LPFM stations. 3.
Eliminate the Petition’s
proposed requirement that no LPAM station may broadcast more than
85 hours a week. 4.
Require minimum mileage
separations between LPAM
stations, to prevent LPAM-to-LPAM interference, or
at least establish an FCC mechanism
for resolving
LPAM-to-LPAM interference disputes that might occur. 5.
Reduce, modestly, the
Petition’s proposed minimum mileage separations between LPAM
stations and full power stations …
The currently proposed minimum mileage separations assume that
all LPAM stations will have the best
possible ground conductivity (30, compared to an
estimated Lower 48 average of 8 or less) and then adds
a safety margin of 200%. 6.
Keep the Petition’s two
proposed classes of LPAM stations
-- LPAM-30
(up to 30 watts) in most areas, and LPAM-100 (up to 100 watts) in
less densely populated areas
-- but allow
licensing of LPAM-100 stations in areas in which
up to 40,000 people (rather than 20,000
people, as now proposed) live within a 5-mile radius of
the station. 7.
Consider the possibility of allowing LPAM
stations to go above 100 watts in extremely
rural areas.
THE LPAM TEAM accepted the Petition’s call for allowing
individuals, as well as groups, to gain LPAM licenses.
Also accepted was the Petition’s call for allowing LPAM stations
the option of airing commercials.
For a copy of the Team’s Joint Written Comments, and/or for a
copy of the Baumgartner LPAM Petition itself, please contact Kyle Drake,
Chairman of THE LPAM TEAM, at vmalloc@usinternet.com
If you want to join and/or assist THE LPAM TEAM, which currently
has no Annual Membership Dues, Kyle is the person to contact as well.
If you want to join and/or assist THE AMHERST ALLIANCE, which I
currently chair, the Annual Membership Dues are $20.00 for individuals
(including Part 15 broadcasters and aspiring LPFM or LPAM broadcasters)
… $35.00
for non-profit organizations (other than licensed radio stations)
… and $50.00
for licensed Low Power Radio stations (with a Construction Permit).
For more information, visit the
However
… whatever
else you may do, please read the “Model” Filing in the SUPPLEMENT that
accompanies this article …
and make your views known to the FCC’s Localism Task Force, via
your own filing in FCC Docket RM-10803. ********************************************************************************************
UPDATE ON CONGRESSIONAL ACTION:
It just so happens that 39% is the exact percentage needed to
protect certain TV broadcasters from mandatory divestiture of TV stations,
and/or other penalties, for illegally going to a 39% market share when the
legal limit was still 35%.
So much for the GOP as the party of “law and order” …
In any event, one persistent error in the current media reports
needs to be corrected. The
mass media and the trade media alike have been depicting the 39% figure as
a “compromise”.
President Bush had repeatedly threatened to veto any bill
which overturned any part of the FCC’s June 2 decision to ease
media ownership ceilings.
He finally agreed not to veto the bill after the
House/Senate Conferees had agreed to protect some of his key corporate
campaign contributors, in the broadcasting industry, from the legal
consequences of breaking the law.
Interestingly enough, had the conservative Republican leaders in
Congress decided to call the President’s bluff, it is virtually certain
that the President’s veto would have been overridden.
However, such a veto override vote would have made more visible
than ever how many individual Republicans in Congress are willing to break
ranks with the President on media ownership issues.
Needless to say, the Republican leaders of Congress must have been
terrified by the thought of revealing in public how many Republican
legislators do not agree with their Fearless Leader.
This “compromise” does not extend to Democratic Party leaders
in either the House or the Senate.
They now view their Republican counterparts as guilty of
“welching on a deal” to restore the 35% cap on TV ownership.
They are so angry that this week they are trying to kill the
current spending bill completely, sending everyone back one step, rather
than go along with the 39% cap on TV ownership
-- or with
another new provision, also added by the Conference Committee, that
overturns overtime legislation passed by both Houses of Congress this
summer. in
his battles with the general public.
How long will such Congressional Republicans continue to “fall on
their sword” for a national leader who is not worthy of them?
And --
how long will they keep on re-electing Congressional party leaders
who really don’t care what they think?
They should take some advice from a former Republican:
me.
Senator Goldwater, incidentally, also said this, in the midst of
the first Bush Administration:
“The modern Republican Party is being built on sand.
It’s going to be in really big trouble if the Democratic Party
ever gets a new idea.” COPYRIGHT 2003 BY DON SCHELLHARDT
SUPPLEMENT
TO AMENDMENT
ONE: “MODEL”
FILING WITH
THE FCC’S LOCALISM TASK FORCE (DOCKET
RM-10803) HOW TO FILE YOUR FILING 1.
Filing With The FCC’s
Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS) A.
Go
to the FCC’s Home Page at www.fcc.gov B.
Click
on “E-Filing” (At the top of
the page) C.
On
new page, scroll down to the middle of the page
--
Click on EITHER “
“Electronic Comment Filing System (ECFS)” D.
On
new page --
Click on “Submit A Filing” (in
the upper
right hand corner) E.
On new page --
In the submission form --
See “Docket”
and enter RM-10803 F.
Enter other requested information (name, snail mail address,
Word Processing format of your document, etc.) G.
Use “Browse” option, at the bottom of the submission form,
to Attach your filing H.
Click
Document Submission “button” below the submission form I.
On
new page --
Click where indicated to complete submission J.
BE
SURE TO RECORD THE DOCUMENT NUMBER YOU RECEIVE,
in case you need to prove later that your filing was submitted 2.
E-Mailing Of Copies To
Indicated Parties The FCC has asked all Commenters, in FCC
Docket RM-10803, to send a copy of any filing(s) to each of the following
E-Mail Addresses: [YOUR NAME] [YOUR SNAIL
MAIL ADDRESS] [DATE] Federal Communications Commission C/O Office of the Secretary RE: Action Items For The FCC’s Localism Task Force (Docket RM-10803) Dear Commissioners and Staff Members of
the FCC’s Localism Task Force, I am [We are?] [INSERT A BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF WHO YOU
ARE, AND WHY YOU CARE].
I [We?] commend the FCC for initiating the Localism
Task Force. The first step in restoring localism is protecting, and expanding, Low Power Radio. Low Power Radio is LOCAL Power Radio. I [We?] urge the Task Force to make these
recommendations to the full Commission: EXPEDITED RELIEF ON TRANSLATOR AND
SERVICE STATUS REFORM The Task Force should seek immediate action, by the
full Commission, to answer the urgent call for translator and Service Status
reform in a November 14 Petition For Rulemaking, filed by THE AMHERST
ALLIANCE and 52 other parties. The
parties include Low Power and
full power broadcasters, plus secular and religious broadcasters. The Petition calls for Tertiary Service Status for “satellators”,
and other long distance translators, as well as numerical limits on
ownership of translators. The
Petition also urges an investigation of misrepresentations, and other
abuses, in translator applications. EXPEDITED RELIEF ON INTERFERENCE
FROM IBOC DIGITAL RADIO The Task Force should seek immediate action, by the
full Commission, to answer the same Petition’s call for expedited relief
from interference caused by In Band On Channel (IBOC) Digital Radio. A 40-party Petition For Reconsideration of IBOC
approval was filed more than a year ago, on ADJACENT CHANNEL SPACING REFORM FOR THE LOW
POWER FM RADIO SERVICE The Task Force should seek immediate action, by the
full Commission, to recommend Congressional action to repeal the current
statutory requirement for third adjacent spacing for Low Power FM stations.
This recommendation is amply justified by conclusions of the FCC’s
own technical staff, in studies conducted in 1999, and by recommendations of
the MITRE Corporation, following Congressionally mandated independent
studies in 2002. The
MITRE Report was made public on July 10 and the deadline for public
comments, in FCC Docket 99-25, expired on October 14.
It is time for the FCC to recommend the obvious. ESTABLISHMENT OF A NEW LOW
POWER AM (LPAM) RADIO SERVICE Consideration, by the Localism Task Force, of the
recently filed Petition For Rulemaking to establish a new Low Power AM Radio
Service --
coupled with an ultimate decision, when the Task Force prepares its
recommendations to the full Commission during the summer of 2004, to urge
the issuance of a Notice Of Proposed Rulemaking on LPAM.
The starting point for Task Force action should be the Petition For
Rulemaking that was filed by Fred Baumgartner, C.P.B.E. of In some areas, the FM Band is so crowded that even LPFM
channel spacing reform will not open up frequencies for Low Power Radio.
In Metro Detroit, Metro Boston and other urban areas, LPAM may be the
only way to license any Low Power Radio stations. The Baumgartner Petition is a good starting point, but
I [we?] endorse improvements recommended in December 5 Written Comments by
THE LPAM TEAM, an affiliate of THE AMHERST ALLIANCE.
The recommendations include replacing the proposed
minimum manned air time requirement, and the proposed 85-hour limit on
weekly hours of operation, with the policies that are now in place for LPFM
stations …
establishing Primary Service Status for LPAM stations …
creating a mechanism for resolving possible interference disputes
between LPAM stations …
and reducing, modestly, the proposed minimum mileage separations
between LPAM stations and full power stations. For the reasons indicated, I [we?] urge favorable
action on the recommendations above. Sincerely, [YOUR NAME] |
![]()
![]()
CONDITIONS FOR USE OF THE
AMENDMENT ONE
COLUMN
![]()
COPYRIGHT 1999
BY DON SCHELLHARDT
The images, backgrounds, designs,html ...
Copyright WKJCE RADIO
Personal Expressions GLBT WEB SEVER
J.C. Enterprizes Disk Jockey Service
Used with Persmission
All rights reserved..
Copyright disclaimer: Any thing Don writes here
he retains all copyrights too..
Please contact DON SCHELLHARDT for Permission
to re-publish this column