Nab Swings For The Fences With Delete Delete Filing
When Brendan Carr asked for suggestions about rules to cut, the NAB was ready As the Federal Communications Commission reviews the broadcast regulatory environment, NAB President/CEO Curtis LeGeyt says this moment calls for “bold ideas.” In an 80-page filing, the NAB urges the FCC to seize the moment and fundamentally modernize its regulatory framework, beginning with reforms to the national television ownership cap and the local radio and TV... Chairman Brendan Carr’s “Delete Delete Delete” initiative seeks to help the FCC remove outdated rules, part of a broader push by the Trump administration to review and modernize regulations. “The FCC’s rules should reflect today’s media landscape, not one from decades past,” LeGeyt said in an NAB summary. The National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) filed a comprehensive response with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) as part of the agency’s “Delete, Delete, Delete” initiative, which was launched under former President Trump’s executive orders...
In its filing, NAB pressed the FCC to undertake sweeping reforms to its regulatory structure, with an emphasis on updating the national television ownership cap and the local radio and TV ownership rules. The submission included an 80-page comment document and a 60-page appendix of proposed rule changes, outlining regulations that NAB argued were outdated and impeded broadcasters' ability to invest in journalism, remain competitive with unregulated... “This is a moment for bold ideas, and NAB is proud to lead the charge,” said NAB President and CEO Curtis LeGeyt. “The FCC’s rules should reflect today’s media landscape, not one from decades past. Our filing lays out a clear, actionable path to modernize regulations and empower local radio and TV stations to better serve their communities. We appreciate the Commission, especially Chairman Carr, for launching this important effort.
Reforming outdated ownership rules is the essential first step to strengthening local journalism and ensuring broadcasters can continue to survive.” NAB’s comments were organized to align with the FCC’s directive to identify and reduce regulatory barriers that stifle investment, innovation, and competition. The cornerstone of the submission was ownership reform, with NAB asserting that current rules were crafted for a bygone, pre-internet media environment and no longer served their intended purpose. The FCC’s “Delete, Delete, Delete” initiative was part of a broader government effort encouraging agencies to conduct retrospective reviews and modernize regulatory frameworks. NAB’s filing directly responded to the Commission’s request for input, providing what it described as a detailed roadmap to eliminate antiquated rules, minimize unnecessary compliance burdens, and better align FCC policy with the realities... A bombshell came crashing into the White House health narrative Monday when longtime cardiologist Jonathan Reiner publicly rejected the official spin on President Trump’s recent MRI, calling the explanation “laughable” and suggesting the whole...
Many of us dismiss a rash as “just allergies,” “just dry skin,” or “probably nothing.”. But doctors warn there is one rash that can turn deadly in hours, not days — and Americans rarely recognize it until it’s too late. A terrifying new synthetic drug mixture is showing up in U.S. emergency rooms—and doctors say it’s hitting faster and harder than anything in recent years. AI was utilized for research, writing, citation management, and editing. The U.S.
Department of Agriculture will begin next week to block nutrition assistance funding for states led by Democrats that have not provided data on fraud in the program, Secretary Brooke Rollins told President Donald Trump... The numbers are staggering: six figures of hunters gone, millions more deer on the landscape, and a DNR scrambling to keep control. Wisconsin’s outdoor identity is slipping away. The National Association of Broadcasters has filed comments with the Federal Communications Commission as part of the agency’s “Delete, Delete, Delete” initiative, making a sweeping case for regulatory relief with a particular focus on... In the filing submitted April 11, NAB argued that the FCC’s decades-old ownership caps represent the industry’s most pressing regulatory burden, describing them as “devastating to the viability and future vitality of TV and... “Far and away the most important step the Commission can take in this entire docket – not just with respect to broadcasting – is to eliminate the TV national audience reach cap and the...
The association emphasized the competitive disadvantage broadcasters face against less-regulated digital competitors. “No longer can broadcasting remain the Mount Everest of communications services that the Commission – akin to mountaineers – regulates because it is there,” NAB stated. The National Association of Broadcasters says it filed comprehensive comments with the Federal Communications Commission in response to the agency’s call for public input under its “Delete, Delete, Delete” initiative. NAB says its filing “urges the FCC to seize this moment to fundamentally modernize its regulatory framework, beginning with long-overdue reforms to the national television ownership cap and the local radio and TV ownership... NAB president and CEO Curtis LeGeyt states, “This is a moment for bold ideas, and NAB is proud to lead the charge. The FCC’s rules should reflect today’s media landscape, not one from decades past.
Our filing lays out a clear, actionable path to modernize regulations and empower local radio and TV stations to better serve their communities. We appreciate the Commission, especially Chairman Carr, for launching this important effort. Reforming outdated ownership rules is the essential first step to strengthening local journalism and ensuring broadcasters can continue to survive.” See the entire filing here. In a push to modernize broadcasting regulations, the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) has submitted a detailed proposal to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), urging a comprehensive overhaul of the local radio ownership rules. This move comes as part of the FCC's "Delete, Delete, Delete" initiative, which seeks public input on regulatory reforms in line with recent executive orders promoting deregulation and efficient governance. NAB's filing, a robust document accompanied by a lengthy appendix, outlines the constraints that outdated regulations impose on local broadcasters.
According to NAB, these regulations not only hinder investments in local journalism but also put broadcasters at a competitive disadvantage against unregulated digital platforms, ultimately affecting their ability to serve community needs effectively. Curtis LeGeyt, President and CEO of NAB, emphasized the urgency of the reforms. "The FCC's rules need to reflect the current media landscape, not one that existed decades ago," LeGeyt stated. He highlighted the potential of these reforms to revitalize local media outlets by allowing them greater flexibility in ownership and operations. At the heart of NAB's recommendations is the call to eliminate or significantly relax the local radio ownership rules, which they argue are relics of a bygone era. These rules currently restrict the number of stations a single entity can own in a given market, which NAB claims is stifling growth and investment in the sector.
Furthermore, the filing addresses several other regulatory areas where NAB believes changes are necessary. These include the elimination of certain paperwork burdens that do not benefit the public, and reforms to outdated children's television programming rules, among others. Trade group rebuts pay-TV operator proposal to reduce blackouts by changing rules governing retransmission consent, carriage negotiations When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. WASHINGTON—The National Association of Broadcasters has filed a wide-ranging rebuttal to proposals by the pay TV industry that the Federal Communications Commission delete and/or significantly change rules governing retransmission consent and carriage agreements with...
The NAB also filed detailed comments on many of the tech and regulatory proposals it made in an early filing listing the regulations it would like to see eliminated or reduced. The FCC’s deregulatory push and the creation of a docket for public comments called “In Re: Delete, Delete, Delete,” had made the agency's Docket 25-133 one of the most popular items on the agency’s... Those comments include lengthy filings and letters from the National Association of Broadcasters, the Society of Broadcast Engineers, state broadcasting associations, America’s Public Television Stations, PBS, Nexstar, Sinclair, Gray Media, Mission Broadcasting and many... One day before FCC Chairman Brendan Carr unveiled his “Build America” Agenda, the NAB and a coalition of major radio stakeholders met with his office to continue their campaign for the use of software-based... In the July 1 meeting, NAB Associate General Counsel Larry Walke was joined by representatives from iHeartMedia, Beasley Media Group, Cox Media Group, and New York Public Radio. The group pressed Carr’s team to advance NAB’s March 2025 Petition for Rulemaking, which calls for broadcasters to have the voluntary option to use secure, software-based alternatives to the hardware-only EAS systems currently required...
“We emphasized that, if approved, implementing NAB’s approach would be optional for EAS Participants, and as described in the attached presentation, enhance the effectiveness and security of EAS,” wrote Walke. The conversation highlighted how the shift to software would bring EAS infrastructure in line with other modernized broadcast technologies, simplify compliance and maintenance, and provide critical failover capabilities in disaster scenarios. NAB also positioned the proposal as aligned with Carr’s ongoing Delete, Delete, Delete initiative, which seeks to eliminate outdated or burdensome broadcast regulations. “Allowing the use of a software-based EAS ENDEC would relieve entities that choose this option of the regulatory and practical burdens associated with having to own and maintain hardware devices,” said the NAB.
People Also Search
- NAB Swings for the Fences With "Delete, Delete" Filing
- NAB Urged FCC to Modernize Ownership Rules in "Delete, Delete, Delete ...
- NAB calls broadcast ownership rules 'existential challenge' in FCC filing
- PDF Before the Federal Communications Commission Washington, D.C. 20554
- NAB Files 80 Pages of Comments for FCC Deregulation
- ECFS - Filing Details - Federal Communications Commission
- NAB Calls for Modernization of Radio Ownership Rules
- NAB to FCC: Don't Delete Certain Retransmission Rules
- NAB Coalition Asks Carr To 'Delete' EAS Hardware-Only Mandate
When Brendan Carr Asked For Suggestions About Rules To Cut,
When Brendan Carr asked for suggestions about rules to cut, the NAB was ready As the Federal Communications Commission reviews the broadcast regulatory environment, NAB President/CEO Curtis LeGeyt says this moment calls for “bold ideas.” In an 80-page filing, the NAB urges the FCC to seize the moment and fundamentally modernize its regulatory framework, beginning with reforms to the national telev...
In Its Filing, NAB Pressed The FCC To Undertake Sweeping
In its filing, NAB pressed the FCC to undertake sweeping reforms to its regulatory structure, with an emphasis on updating the national television ownership cap and the local radio and TV ownership rules. The submission included an 80-page comment document and a 60-page appendix of proposed rule changes, outlining regulations that NAB argued were outdated and impeded broadcasters' ability to inves...
Reforming Outdated Ownership Rules Is The Essential First Step To
Reforming outdated ownership rules is the essential first step to strengthening local journalism and ensuring broadcasters can continue to survive.” NAB’s comments were organized to align with the FCC’s directive to identify and reduce regulatory barriers that stifle investment, innovation, and competition. The cornerstone of the submission was ownership reform, with NAB asserting that current rul...
Many Of Us Dismiss A Rash As “just Allergies,” “just
Many of us dismiss a rash as “just allergies,” “just dry skin,” or “probably nothing.”. But doctors warn there is one rash that can turn deadly in hours, not days — and Americans rarely recognize it until it’s too late. A terrifying new synthetic drug mixture is showing up in U.S. emergency rooms—and doctors say it’s hitting faster and harder than anything in recent years. AI was utilized for rese...
Department Of Agriculture Will Begin Next Week To Block Nutrition
Department of Agriculture will begin next week to block nutrition assistance funding for states led by Democrats that have not provided data on fraud in the program, Secretary Brooke Rollins told President Donald Trump... The numbers are staggering: six figures of hunters gone, millions more deer on the landscape, and a DNR scrambling to keep control. Wisconsin’s outdoor identity is slipping away....