Spokesman: FCC Ready to Take 'Appropriate Action' If CBS/TWC Dispute Continues

An FCC spokesman signaled late Wednesday that the FCC could take some action if the CBS/Time Warner Cable isn't resolved soon.

"The Commission reminds the parties of their obligation to negotiate in good faith for the benefit of consumers.  We are in regular contact with the parties and stand ready to take appropriate action if the dispute continues," said the spokesman. He would not elaborate on what that might mean, but FCC Acting Chairwoman Mignon Clyburn is on the record as not being partial to negotiating tactics that delay blackout resolution.

"Refusing to negotiate, using delay tactics, and crying wolf via inflammatory notices are actions that should never take place," Clyburn said in a 2011 statement following the FCC's release of a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on possible retrans reforms, including better clarifying what constitutes good faith negotiations, which the FCC is empowered to enforce.

"When a TV screen goes dark, people blame not only the companies, but the government as well," she said at the time.

But she also reads the FCC's authority as limited, as did her predecessor. "[T]the law here is clear: The Commission holds limited authority via limited methods."

Former House Communications Subcommittee chairman and now Senate Commerce Committee member Ed Markey (D-Mass.), wrote Clyburn on Aug. 6 to ask that the FCC step in to get the parties to the table.

"I request that the Commission take action to bring the parties together so these negotiations can be concluded in an equitable and expeditious manner," he wrote.

Back in 2010, then Rep. Markey wrote an extremely similar letter to then FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski about a high-profile Fox/Cablevision blackout, also involving New York.

In that case, Genachowski did step in to the extent that Media Bureau Chief Bill Lake asked both sides to explain how their negotiations square with the law that requires those negotiations to be "in good faith." The FCC under Genachowski interpreted its powers as limited to insure those good faith negotiations.

Lake also asked each side to provide any evidence against the other side if they had it. Both sides responded.

Now word yet on whether Lake, still the bureau chief, will repeat his request in this context.

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.