Genachowski Still Wants Dish Item Voted by Year's End

FCC chairman Julius Genachowski said Friday that his goal is
still to vote the Dish item by the end of the year. That is the FCC decision to
open up satellite spectrum -- including that held by Dish -- for terrestrial
mobile broadband use, but with restrictions Dish says could "cripple"
its business plans. But he was less definitive about a vote on media ownership.

Asked at a press conference about the Dish item, which the
chairman has circulated for a vote by the other commissioners, the chairman
said that if he did succeed in getting it voted by then it would be "by
far the fastest the commission has ever resolved a rulemaking like this,"
but added: "We are still committed to getting this done by the end of the
year."

According to a sources familiar with the vote tally, the chairman has not yet voted his own item, with only Democrat Jessica Rosenworcel having cast a vote.

Dish Chairman Charlie Ergen was reportedly at the commission
Thursday to pitch the chairman and others on why he was unhappy that, as part
of the proposal, the FCC was making it incumbent upon Dish and others to
prevent interference with an adjacent, currently unused, spectrum band (the H
band) that the FCC plans to auction, also for wireless broadband. Dish and the
chairman's office have been in a bit of a war of words over the issue, with a
spokesman for the chairman saying that "in arguing that the Commission
should destroy the value of the H block [Dish says it is proposing nothing of
the sort], Dish is seeking to take a public asset potentially worth billions of
dollars and turn it into a private windfall."

Dish originally sought a waiver of the rules a year and a
half ago because it said it wanted to launch a 4G wireless service, but the FCC
put that waiver on hold while it teed up the broader rule change, part of an
effort to free up more spectrum for wireless broadband across the board.

The chairman has been also been under fire from minority and
anti-consolidation groups over another item being circulated among
commissioners -- rather than slated for a vote at a public meeting: the media
ownership rule changes. They argue the FCC is rushing to a vote before it has
thoroughly vetted the rule changes' impact on diversity.

Asked whether he still planned to have that voted out by the
end of the year, or was considering delaying the proceeding for public comments,
as the Minority Media and Telecommunications Council has requested, Genachowski
pointed out that the quadrennial review of ownership rules proceeding had
started in 2010 with a notice of inquiry, on which it received substantial
comment. He said the commission had already heard from a diverse set of
stakeholders, had held six public hearings, more than 10 studies released, and
commented on.

He said the FCC had not made any decisions -- the item has
been circulated but not yet voted.

But asked directly whether the item would be voted on by
year's end, which he has said in the past was his goal, the chairman was not as
definitive as he was with the Dish item. "We have an obligation as a
commission to move forward with each of these reviews as fast as possible and
we are going to move as a commission as fast as we can."

Genachowski was asked why he was not slating the Dish or
Media Ownership for public votes, rather than on circulation. Minority groups
and others have raised the same issue about the ownership vote. He suggested it
was nothing out of the ordinary, and that in either forum the items got the
same care and handling. "We do both major and minor items in meetings and
on circulation. The process is the same, open and transparent...In each of
those proceedings we have had notices, opportunities for comment, many meetings
subject to ex partes, and we make the decision in each case about how best to
efficiently make our decisions and do our work."

He did not elaborate on how it made the decision in these
particular cases, however.

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.