In June, AT&T filed a bad faith complaint
against nine individual station owners, which collectively
pulled 20 stations in 17 cities from DIRECTV, DIRECTV NOW and/or
U-verse. The nine station groups are either managed or
controlled by Sinclair Broadcast Group, AT&T said.
One of these owners controls three ABC, CBS, NBC or FOX
affiliates; another has two, and five owners have one. AT&T said
it has reached agreement with three of the nine broadcasters
named in the complaint.
AT&T reached settlements with two of the groups, while the FCC
said the seven remaining broadcast station groups "violated the
per se good faith negotiation standards" and cited repeated
delays by the negotiator for the owners in agreeing to talks.
"This is the most egregious example of delay that we have
encountered since the good faith rules were adopted," the FCC
said.
Sinclair said the "matter is between these licensees and the
FCC. We have no involvement in these negotiations."
AT&T said the "FCC ruling that the broadcast station groups’
behavior was a violation of its rules shows again that the
entire retransmission consent process is broken and demands
immediate reform."
The company added it was "clearly one of the more egregious
examples of how broadcasters routinely hold consumers hostage
into paying higher and higher retrans fees, rather than being
stewards of the public airwaves."
In October, Sinclair said it had reached a multiyear agreement
across DIRECTV, AT&T TV and U-verse for continued use of
Sinclair’s owned local broadcast stations and other programming,
including the Tennis Channel and a regional sports network
featuring Chicago Cubs games launching in 2020.
The dispute comes as Congress is considering whether to
reauthorize the Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act
(STELAR), a law governing the retransmission of broadcast
television by satellite companies. If the law is not extended,
the FCC will lose authority to enforce "good faith" rules with
regard to retransmission consent.
On Wednesday, the Senate Commerce Committee plans to take up the
bill introduced by the panel's chair, Roger Wicker.
"If Congress does not renew STELAR this year, these broadcaster
TV blackouts will increase in frequency," AT&T said.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Steve Orlofsky and
Jonathan Oatis)
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