RS20425 -- Satellite Television: Historical Information on SHVIA and LOCAL


Updated December 15, 2004






Summary

Congress has passed several laws to provide consumers greater access to local network television stations, particularly via satellite. The 1988 Satellite Home Viewer Act (SHVA), amended in 1994, was expanded in 1999 with the Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act (SHVIA). SHVIA allows (not requires) satellite companies to retransmit a local broadcast network signal back into the same local market area from which it originates ("local-into-local"). Concerned that satellite TV companies do not plan to offer local-into-local in all parts of the country, Congress then passed the Launching Our Communities Access to Local Television Act (LOCAL). That act creates a loan guarantee program to help ensure that consumers in small and rural markets receive local network TV stations via satellite or other technologies. This historical report summarizes SHVIA and LOCAL, and the debate over whether a company called Northpoint should be able to use the same frequencies as satellites to transmit data and television using terrestrial systems. It does not address the 2004 Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act (SHVERA). See CRS Report RS21768 instead. This report will not be updated.




The Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act (SHVIA)

The 1999 Satellite Home Viewer Improvement Act (1) (SHVIA) expands on and extends some provisions of the 1988 Satellite Home Viewer Act (SHVA), as amended, regarding consumer reception of television signals via satellite dishes. Two major companies, EchoStar and DirecTV (a subsidiary of News Corp.), offer satellite television services today through their direct broadcast satellite (DBS) systems. EchoStar's service is called Dish TV. DirecTV's programming is also distributed through the National Rural Telecommunications Cooperative (NRTC) and by Pegasus Communications. Another company, Rainbow DBS (a subsidiary of Cablevision) offers a comparatively small number of satellite channels though a service called Voom. Historical information on SHVA and the issues Congress faced in revising it are available in CRS Report 98-942.

The 1999 law, SHVIA, provides consumers greater access to broadcast network television programming via their satellite dishes. The original law permitted rebroadcast of distant network signals to consumers who lived outside the "Grade B contour" of broadcast network affiliate stations. The 1999 law continues to permit that activity, but also allows satellite companies to rebroadcast local network signals back into the same local market area. They are not required to do so, however.

Local versus Distant Network Signals. The distinction between local and distant network signals is important to understanding SHVIA. A local signal is received within a network television affiliate's local area. A distant signal is from elsewhere in the country. If a consumer lives in Denver and is receiving a signal from a Denver network affiliate, that is a local signal. If a consumer lives in West Virginia and is receiving a signal from that Denver network affiliate via satellite, it is a distant network signal.

Who May Receive Distant Network Signals. The original SHVA established the "Grade B" (2) contour as the determining factor as to whether a particular household was eligible to receive distant network signals via satellite. Consumers living inside the Grade B contour were not allowed to receive such signals while those outside the contour (in so-called "white areas") were allowed to receive them. Some satellite companies transmitted distant network signals to consumers inside Grade B contours, however, leading to court challenges by the networks to try to force the satellite companies to obey the law. Based on decisions by a Miami judge in 1998, over 2 million consumers reportedly had, or were scheduled to have, distant network signals terminated by their satellite companies. EchoStar appealed the decision to the Supreme Court in 2002, which declined to hear the case.

In the 1999 law, Congress "grandfathered" consumers who had been receiving distant network signals illegally as long as they could not receive a signal of "Grade A"2 intensity. For new subscribers, however, the original rules apply. To receive distant network signals, new subscribers must not be able to receive a signal of Grade B intensity as determined using the Individual Location Longely-Rice (ILLR) method for predicting signal strength established by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in February 1999. SHVIA directed the FCC to review whether the Grade B standard should still be used for the purposes of SHVIA. The FCC concluded it should (FCC-016, ET Docket No. 00-90).

Consumers who believe they are not receiving a Grade A or Grade B signal despite predictive models showing that they are may seek a waiver to receive distant network signals via satellite. Consumers must apply to their satellite company for the waiver. The satellite company forwards the request to the local network affiliate. There is no time limit for the satellite company to take that action. Once the request is received, the local affiliate has 30 days to decide whether or not to grant the waiver. If the waiver is granted, or if no action is taken by the affiliate, the consumer may then receive distant network signals from the satellite company. If a waiver is denied, consumers may then request a signal intensity test from their satellite company. The satellite company and the local affiliate are required jointly to choose someone to conduct the test. The consumer does not bear the cost of the test. Instead, the "loser" pays (either the satellite company or the affiliate), or the satellite company and the affiliate may choose some other method of paying the costs as long as the consumer does not pay. Exceptions were made for recreational vehicles (as defined by Department of Housing and Urban Development regulations), commercial trucks (as defined by Department of Transportation regulations), and for consumers using large "C-band" satellite dishes. The RV or commercial truck cannot be a fixed dwelling.

In summary, the following consumers may receive distant network signals until December 31, 2004, the period for which the compulsory license (see below) was extended:

Consumers using "C-band" dishes are not subject to the five year limitation. They may receive distant network signals they were receiving before October 31, 1999 indefinitely.

Who May Receive Local Signals. SHVIA permits DBS companies to provide "local-into-local" service, where a local broadcast TV signal is transmitted up to the satellite and back down to consumers in that same "designated market area" (DMA). The law does not require the DBS companies to provide this service. There is considerable confusion on this point, stemming, in part, from the fact the law also created a "must carry" provision. Under must carry, each DBS company must provide all local broadcast stations in a particular market if it provides any local station in that market. This does not mean that DBS companies must carry local broadcast programming throughout the country. Instead, if a DBS provider chooses to provide local broadcast programming in a market, it must carry all local TV stations in that market that wish to be carried (with exceptions for duplicative programing and educational stations). The DBS companies still may choose not to provide local-into-local service in any particular market.

Cable companies already were subject to must carry rules (depending on the size of the cable system). The must carry provisions for DBS went into effect on January 1, 2002. (3) The DBS companies oppose the must carry requirement (see below) and unsuccessfully attempted to overturn it in court.

According to their respective websites, as of October 2004, EchoStar offered local-into-local in 152 markets and DirecTV in 106 markets. Both plan to add more markets as additional capacity becomes available. There are 210 designated market areas (DMAs) in the United States as identified by Nielsen Media Research, meaning that many smaller communities do not receive local signals via satellite. DMAs differ in size, so the number of DMAs served is not necessarily indicative of the percentage of the population able to receive local-into-local. When EchoStar passed the 100 DMA mark, it reported that 83% of the population could receive its local-into-local service. DirecTV asserts that it will provide local-into-local in at least 130 DMAs by the end of 2004, which it says represents 92% of TV households. Congress passed the LOCAL Act (see below) in 2000 to help ensure that small and rural areas that cannot obtain local-into-local service from EchoStar or DirecTV can receive local television via other satellite or terrestrial technologies.

Compulsory Copyright License. Another issue regarding satellite retransmission of television programming concerns compensation to those who own the copyright on the programming. Under both the 1988 and 1999 laws, satellite carriers were given a compulsory copyright license for restransmitting distant network and superstation signals. That means that the copyright owners must make that programming available to the satellite companies at government-set prices. (4) Without such a license, the satellite companies would have to negotiate with each copyright owner individually. The 1999 law extended the compulsory license for distant network signals for five years, until December 31, 2004. The 108th Congress is considering whether to extend it further, and whether to change how the prices are set (see CRS Report RS21768). For retransmitting local signals, however, Congress gave the satellite companies a royalty-free permanent compulsory copyright license. Cable has a permanent compulsory copyright license. (Copyright compensation is separate from business arrangements negotiated to obtain retransmission consent, which is explained in footnote 3 below.)

Table 1: Summary of SHVIA Provisions

The LOCAL Act: Loan Guarantees, and "Northpoint"

In 1999, the conference version of H.R. 1554 would have created a loan guarantee program to help ensure that subscribers in small and rural markets benefit from the local-into-local provisions even though EchoStar and DirecTV do not plan to offer such service in all areas. The provision was deleted before final passage because of objections by Senator Gramm that the proposal had not been sufficiently debated. Congress subsequently passed the "Launching Our Communities Access to Local Television Act" (LOCAL) as Title X of the FY2001 Commerce-Justice-State Appropriations Act as enacted by the FY2001 District of Columbia Appropriations Act (P.L. 106-553).

Loan Guarantees. LOCAL created a four-person board, consisting of the Secretaries of Treasury, Agriculture, and Commerce, and the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, or their designees, to select recipients of loan guarantees for up to $1.25 billion in loans (generally, 80% of the loan may be guaranteed). The loans may be used to build systems to ensure that consumers throughout the country can receive local television signals. The Board is to take into account whether a project serves "nonserved" or "underserved" areas and whether it would provide high-speed Internet access. The act is technology neutral in that it does not specify whether local TV stations would be provided by satellite, cable, or other transmission media, but places some limits on which cable companies are eligible. The Board's website is http://www.usda.gov/rus/localtvboard/. The Board issued regulations for the LOCAL Television Loan Guarantee Program in the December 23, 2003 Federal Register (pp. 74411-74433). An application period ended April 21, 2004. One application was received. On May 24, the Board voted 3-1 to return that application because it was incomplete, and then voted unanimously to open another 60-day application period. However, the Board rescinded the latter decision on July 6.

The loan guarantee program is administered by the Rural Utilities Service in the Department of Agriculture, which received $280 million in the FY2002 Agriculture appropriations act (P.L. 107-76) for the program. Section 6404 of the Farm Security and Rural Investment Act (P.L.107-171, H.R. 2646) allocated $80 million for the program from the Commodity Credit Corporation through December 31, 2006. GAO is required to review the program annually, and criticized the slow progress of the program in its first such report (GAO-04-134, October 2003). Its second report (GAO-05-18R, October 2004) stressed the need for the Board to accurately accumulate and report administrative costs to meet federal cost accounting requirements and determine what portion must be recovered through fees.

The "Northpoint Provision". LOCAL required the FCC to select an independent entity to conduct tests to determine whether terrestrial systems operating in the same frequency band as DBS satellites (12.2-12.7 Gigahertz) would cause unacceptable interference to DBS systems. This is often called "the Northpoint provision" because a company called Northpoint Technology, through its Broadwave subsidiary, wants to operate a terrestrial wireless system offering TV programming similar to that provided by DBS, and data services. It is seeking a license from the FCC for that terrestrial service, designated MVDDS (Multichannel Video Distribution and Data Service). Until now, the 12.2-12.7 GHz band has been assigned only to satellites. The FCC chose the MITRE Corporation to conduct the interference tests in 2001, and it concluded that the two systems could not co-exist unless the MVDDS systems use a number of mitigating techniques. DBS operators hailed the MITRE report because it concluded that MVDDS would cause interference to their operations. Northpoint hailed the report because it said there were mitigating steps that could be taken.

The FCC decided that MVDDS and DBS could co-exist, but dismissed without prejudice applications by Northpoint and two other companies to provide MVDDS (FCC 02-116, ET Docket 98-206), deciding to auction the frequencies instead. Northpoint objected to that decision, and chose not to participate in the auction. Other companies did, however, and the auction was completed on January 27, 2004, raising $118.7 million http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-243253A1.pdf.

S. 564, and H.R. 1320 as reported from the Senate Commerce Committee (S.Rept. 108-168), would have eliminated the auction requirement for fixed terrestrial services (such as MVDDS) other than mobile phones in the 12.2-12.7 GHz band. Similar language was in the Senate-passed version of the FY2004 Commerce, Justice, State Appropriations bill (Sec. 626 of S. 1585), but not in the final version of the bill (part of the FY2004 Consolidated Appropriations Act, H.R. 2673, P.L. 108-199).




Footnotes

1. (back)SHVIA is Title I of the Intellectual Property and Communications Omnibus Reform Act of 1999, included by cross reference in the FY2000 Consolidated Appropriations Act, P.L. 106-113. The final version of the bill, S. 1948, was introduced in the closing days of the 106th Congress, 1st session to reflect changes the Senate wanted to make to the conference version of H.R. 1554 (H.Rept. 106-464) that had already passed the House. S. 1948 was not reported from any committee and hence there is no report language to accompany it. The report on H.R. 1554, excluding the sections on the loan guarantee program and whether the compulsory license should extend to Internet companies, is indicative of congressional views, however.

2. (back)Grade A and Grade B contours can be visualized as circles around a TV station's transmitter indicating the strength of a signal received within that area. The Grade A contour is close to the transmitter and reception there is better than in the Grade B contour, but reception within the Grade B contour is still considered acceptable. The FCC describes these contours as follows: "a quality acceptable to the median observer is expected to be available for at least 90 percent of the time at the best 70 percent of receiver locations at the outer limits of [Grade A] service. In the case of Grade B service the figures are 90 percent of the time and 50 percent of the locations." (FCC Cable Services Bureau, report FCC 99-14, CS Docket 98-201, paragraph 33.)

3. (back)Each TV station chooses whether or not it wants to be carried by the satellite company. Commercial stations choose between "retransmission consent" or "must carry" status. Under retransmission consent, the station negotiates with the satellite company the terms under which the station will be carried (usually involving payment of a fee by the satellite company, and sometimes requiring the satellite company to carry other programming as well). Non-commercial stations, and commercial stations that do not believe they can negotiate a favorable retransmission consent arrangement, may elect "must carry" status where there are no payments by either party. SHVIA also made four other cable regulations -- syndicated exclusivity, sports blackout, network nonduplication, and retransmission consent -- applicable to satellite companies. The first three apply to retransmission of signals of nationally distributed superstations. Of those three, only sports blackout applies to network stations and only if technically feasible and not economically prohibitive. For more on retransmission consent, see CRS Report RL32026.

4. (back)The rate set in 1997, 27 cents per subscriber per month for both superstations and distant network stations, was controversial (see CRS Report 98-140(pdf)A). The rates are set periodically under procedures of the Copyright Office of the Library of Congress. SHVIA reduced the rate for distant network signals by 45% and for superstation signals by 30%.