Comcast Conditions Mount;Opposition Remains

Comcast and NBC Universal have agreed to pages worth of voluntary public interest conditions on their proposed joint venture. And the FCC is preparing to impose those conditions, and more, in a lengthy addendum to its draft approval, covering online and on-air program access, network neutrality and other issues.

While still not enough to assuage critics, the conditions indicate the “feeding frenzy” surrounding media mergers, and could be the new price of entry in an era where mergers are involving an increasing number of business lines.

The pledges will cost Comcast millions—from venture capital funds for minority ownership, to development dollars for independent programmers, to investments in broadband deployment and independent and local programming.

But Comcast is not balking at the expense, or at the laundry list of conditions—which may offer a clue as to why opponents of the deal are far from satisfied.

According to a source familiar with the document, the FCC’s list of conditions on the draft tentatively approving the Comcast/NBCU deal runs to more than 25 pages. By contrast, the conditions of Comcast’s purchase of Adelphia cable systems in July 2006 ran about five pages, the same number as in the first big cable combo affecting online access, AOL/Time Warner.

Why so thick a sheaf? For one thing, Comcast and NBCU volunteered a raft of public interest conditions at the outset to help pave the way for the deal, which combines the nation’s largest cable operator with a studio library and broadcast and cable networks. Comcast/NBCU sweetened the pot even more with side deals with minority groups and TV station affiliates, along with voluntary conditions toward the end of the process that targeted the FCC’s broadband-deployment and community media sweet spots.

With the caveat that he had not seen any of the conditions, a veteran Washington cable attorney agreed that one reason for the number of conditions was the abundance of different business lines involved, including broadcast affiliates, MVPD and online competitors, unaffiliated program networks, regional sports networks and telcos. “The previous mergers had opponents,” the attorney says, “but not as many lines of business.”

Rebecca Arbogast, a managing director at investment firm Stifel Nicolaus, said the laundry list of conditions was to be expected, but added she has believed for a while that most of them “would not be material” to the operator. Comcast has suggested that nothing in the draft was a deal-breaker, which would include the conditions on online access and network neutrality, at least as originally drafted. Comcast has already said it would abide by net neutrality conditions even if they were thrown out by the courts.

“Anytime there is a major, controversial merger, it attracts lots of calls for ‘public interest’ conditions,” says Arbogast. “This merger had a broad canvas to paint these on, because it has both broadband and media components.”

But broad canvas or no, deal critics like Free Press say the FCC conditions, at least as advertised in press accounts including by B&C, have failed to go beyond preserving a status quo it thinks has problems already.

Corie Wright, Free Press policy counsel, says it is important not to confuse quantity with quality. “The voluntary commitments are in some ways nice gestures,” Wright says. “But it is not clear they are sufficient to remedy a lot of problems. I wouldn’t say they are bad, but the question is, do they really move the ball down the field?” With the caveat that the FCC draft is not yet public, Wright argues they don’t. For example?

“Comcast’s proposal to increase local programming on NBC stations by 1,000 hours does not include Telemundo,” Wright says. According to FCC sources, that has been changed in the draft order, with 1,000 hours for the Spanish-language stations as well. Wright says there needs to be a specific definition of local programming, and that it is not clear how meaningful and enforceable the Comcast voluntary conditions are.

How long each of the conditions remains in effect is another devil in the details, Wright adds. While deal conditions generally run for seven years, Comcast will be able to petition to lift the conditions if it can make a case they are not needed, according to sources inside and outside the FCC.

Andrew Schwartzman of Media Access Project says no matter how conditions are imposed, it will not be sufficient. “That said, we certainly think that what we’ve been hearing about needs to be beefed up.”

If there is any beefing up to do, it will stem from the current vetting the FCC draft was getting last week from commission staffers. A vote is expected no earlier than this week.

E-mail comments to jeggerton@nbmedia.com and follow him on Twitter: @eggerton

John Eggerton

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.