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FCC

FCC Tees up More Regulation Whacking for Feb. Meeting

Will vote to save trees, including proposing to eliminate some EEO paperwork 2/01/2018 3:47 PM Eastern

The FCC has signaled that there will be a half-dozen items for the February 22 public meeting, including three more whacks at regulatory "weeds" (the FCC circulates a tentative agenda three weeks before the meeting, and a final agenda--subject to change, still, actually--a week before).

The items are 1) proposed new guidelines to "improve" the process of promoting new tech and services; 2) an order resolving issues in a its ongoing funding to advanced communications through Universal Service Fund subsidies; 3 a proposed rulemaking seeking comment on rules for high-band spectrum (above 95Ghz); 4) a proposal to eliminate the filing of midterm EEO reports by TV and radio broadcasters--while maintaining the mid-term EEO review; 5) an order eliminating the requirement that cable and broadcast stations maintain paper copies of FCC rules (they must still be familiar with those rules, to no copy is not excuse; 6) and eliminating various rules for pay phones, given that they are a dying breed of communications device.

Eliminating the paper copies of FCC rules requirement was the first in what has become an ongoing series of proposals to clear out the regulatory underbrush and reduce what is billed as unnecessary paperwork.

In blogging about the agenda, which has become a regular ritual, FCC Chairman Ajit Pai wrote that the support to eliminate the rules paperwork was unanimous.

He also explained that while the FCC would continue its midterm (after four years of an eight-year broadcast license term) review of station's EEO practices, he was proposing eliminating the requirement that they also submit a form with EEO information meant to aid that review. He said given that all but one piece of information now on the form is available in the online public files-he did not say which piece was not--"it doesn’t make much sense to require someone to file what you can already access online."

 An FCC spokesperson was checking at press time on what that one piece of info was, though if the idea is to save paper, one solution would be to add that piece to the online public file requirement.

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