Consumer Groups Urge FCC Not to Extend Audible Crawl Waiver
The FCC shouldn’t extend broadcasters’ waiver of the 2013 audible crawl rule without gathering more information on NAB’s efforts to implement audible crawls or setting specific benchmarks for implementation, said the American Council for the Blind and the American Foundation for the Blind in comments posted in docket 12-107 Tuesday. “We are concerned that outreach related to this waiver petition is being performed to check-the-box and will continue to prove insufficient for finding or developing a solution to this problem,” said a joint filing from the consumer groups. Compliance with the 2013 rule requiring broadcasters to provide audio description on a second audio stream of emergency information conveyed through graphics was originally required by 2015, but the agency granted an 18-month waiver and has repeatedly extended it (see 2304100058). NAB requested a two-year extension for the current waiver, which expires May 26. In comments posted Tuesday, the Society of Broadcast Engineers backed NAB’s request. “The technology for automated audio description of a dynamic image simply does not yet exist to permit broadcasters to effectively and efficiently abide by the non-textual component of the Audible Crawl Rule,” said SBE. The FCC should determine whether NAB has reached outside the broadcast industry to technical experts in AI and emergency alerting, the consumer groups said. “Without proactive outreach and engagement by broadcasters to the technology sector” a solution ”will not materialize and consumers with disabilities will never receive full and equal access to emergency alert information.”