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FCC Said to Eye Vote on Ownership Rules Key to Sinclair Deal

Sinclair told the FCC the deal would make them reach almost 59 percent of the national audience.

FCC Said to Eye Vote on Ownership Rules Key to Sinclair Deal
Ajit Pai, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), listens during a Senate Appropriations Subcommittee hearing in Washington, D.C.(Photographer: Zach Gibson/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The Federal Communications Commission’s chairman is said to be planning a vote next month on limits to how many TV stations a company can own, rules he has said are too restrictive and that could factor into Sinclair Broadcast Group Inc.’s planned purchase of Tribune Media Co.

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai is poised to schedule a July 12 vote on altering rules that cap broadcasters’ reach at 39 percent of the national audience, according to two people briefed on the plan, who who spoke on condition of anonymity because the proposal hasn’t been made public.

A vote next month could head off a decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in Washington that is considering a challenge to part of the existing rules. The case threatens to push Sinclair over the existing national ownership cap if it buys Tribune.

Proposals from Pai, an appointee of President Donald Trump, are all but certain to pass with votes from the Republican majority he leads. Pai hasn’t publicly recommended a new limit and details of his proposal could not be learned.

Sinclair’s odds of winning approval would get a boost if the FCC votes to raise or end the 39 percent cap, Matthew Schettenhelm, a Bloomberg Intelligence analyst, said in a note Thursday. Such a move by the FCC could convince the court not to decide its case, he said.

Sinclair rose 45 cents, or 1.4 percent, to $32.35 at 9:43 a.m. New York time, and Tribune jumped 86 cents, or 2.3 percent.

Sinclair told the FCC its proposal to buy Tribune’s 42 stations and sell others would leave it reaching almost 59 percent of the national audience. That share shrinks to less than 38 percent when counting just half the audience for some stations, as the FCC now allows, using a counting methodology that is under court challenge, Sinclair said in a filing.

A National Presence

The acquisition would leave Sinclair with more than 200 stations and give the Maryland-based broadcaster known for its conservative views a national presence, with stations in major cities such as New York and Los Angeles.

If the FCC abandons the special counting technique that discounts the audience of former UHF stations and chooses a new limit under 59 percent, Sinclair could be forced to sell more stations than it currently proposes, Gigi Sohn, a former Democratic FCC official and critic of the deal, said in an interview.

Any limit above 39 percent would itself draw a court challenge, Sohn said. “That’s going to be appealed right away,” she said.

Whether the FCC may let companies count just half the audience is under challenge before the Court of Appeals, where judges who questioned the technique during an April hearing are expected to issue a decision during July or August. A decision disallowing the technique would leave a combined Sinclair-Tribune above the limit.

Sinclair Chief Executive Officer Chris Ripley told investors May 9 that he expects the court will affirm the counting rule. If not, Ripley said the decision could be appealed. He also discussed the FCC’s consideration of changes to the national ownership limit.

The agency in December asked whether to retain or change the national limit, and the discounted audience-counting, without saying how it wanted to rule. Pai, a skeptic of media ownership rules, has long called for raising the national cap, for instance in 2013 saying that step is “long overdue.” The agenda for the July 12 meeting is to be made public on June 21, and Pai’s under no obligation to include the national cap.

Tina Pelkey, an FCC spokeswoman, declined to comment.

In filings at the FCC, some broadcasters have argued for raising the limit to 50 percent.
Sinclair asked the FCC to eliminate the cap. Rebecca Hanson, senior vice president for Sinclair, declined to comment.

The audience-counting rule in question was eliminated by a Democratic FCC chairman in 2016. It was a relic of days when UHF stations -- broadcasting on channels 14 and higher -- used signals that didn’t reach as far as stations assigned lower-numbered channels. That disadvantage has disappeared as broadcast technology changes.

Pai reinstated the discount in April of last year. Sinclair proposed its deal the following month.

The case is Free Press v. Federal Communications Commission, 17-1129, U.S. Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit (Washington).

To contact the reporter on this story: Todd Shields in Washington at tshields3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jon Morgan at jmorgan97@bloomberg.net, John Harney

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