FCC Dismisses ACA Petition to Reconsider Emergency Alert Order

The FCC has granted the American Cable Association's
withdrawal of a petition for reconsideration of the commission's mandate that
cable operators be able to receive emergency alerts from FEMA in the Common
Alerting Protocol (CAP) broadband Internet format after ACA essentially said "never
mind."

ACA withdrew the April 20 petition because the FCC had set a
comment period on the petition that extended to July 3, even though the mandate
to be CAP-compliant was June 30. The group is looking for swift action from the
FCC on waiver requests, however.

ACA pointed out in its June 11 withdrawal petition that
given the deadlines, there could be no "meaningful relief" and that
it was essentially moot. The FCC agreed.

The FCC had said in its order that lack of a broadband
Internet connection would be considered a presumption in favor of a waiver of
the requirement since it makes no sense to require equipment that can't be
used, but ACA had wanted a streamlined waiver process for small cable operators
with 500 or fewer subs.

ACA had not been happy with the FCC's Jan. 10, 2012,
decision
not to grant a blanket waiver from the CAP requirement to systems that
don't have a physical Internet connection,
arguing that it could force the shutdown of some of its smaller members. In its
order, the FCC referred to ACA's warnings about systems going under, but said
that it did not believe it should adopt any form of blanket waiver.

"ACA members are making significant efforts to meet the
FCC's EAS CAP deadline," ACA President Matt Polka told B&C/Multichannel News, "and we appreciate the FCC's sensitivity to
our members' unique concerns by allowing the use of intermediary devices to
help bridge the compliance gap. However, many small systems will not have
internet capability at their head-ends because of their remote locations, and
we trust the FCC will quickly and routinely grant waivers where such legitimate
circumstances exist."

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.