Supporters of Vacant Channel Plan Ignore Potential Harms, NAB Says
Supporters of an FCC proposal to set aside vacant TV band channels in every market nationwide for unlicensed use after the TV incentive auction “have repeatedly ignored the dramatic policy shift it would represent and the associated harm it would cause,” NAB said in a letter filed at the FCC, reporting on meetings between NAB officials and aides to the commissioners. “The Commission’s proposal would, for the first time, remove channels within the TV band from TV use in favor of unlicensed use, and constrain broadcasters’ ability to meet a central tenet of the Communications Act: robust and ubiquitous service to the American people,” NAB said. The proposal would also be harmful for viewers across the country, “particularly in rural areas, who rely on [low-power] TV and translator service,” NAB said. In June, the FCC proposed to reserve at least one TV channel in every market in the U.S. for white spaces devices and wireless mics after the incentive auction and repacking (see 1506160043). NAB filed in docket 12-268.