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Reauthorizing the Satellite Home Viewing
Provisions in the Communications Act and
the Copyright Act: Issues for Congress

Charles B. Goldfarb
Specialist in Telecommunications Policy
July 30, 2009
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R40624
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress

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Reauthorizing the Satellite Home Viewing Provisions

Summary
To further the longstanding U.S. media policy goal of localism, the current statutory framework
for satellite and cable multichannel video programming distribution services distinguishes
between the retransmission of local broadcast signals—the signals of stations located in the same
local market as the subscriber—and of distant signals. Some statutory provisions block or restrict
the retransmission of distant broadcast signals in order to protect local broadcasters from
competition from those signals, with the intention of fostering local programming. At the same
time, Congress has recognized the value of subscribers receiving certain distant signals—for
example, if they are unable to receive broadcast network programming from a local station. Key
copyright and retransmission provisions in the 2004 Satellite Home Viewer Extension and
Reauthorization Act (SHVERA) that make it possible for satellite operators to provide their
subscribers those distant broadcast signals expire on December 31, 2009. If these provisions are
not reauthorized, satellite operators would no longer be able to provide most of those signals to
their subscribers. In addition to the specific statutory provisions subject to sunset, there are
several policy issues currently under debate, including:
• In many situations, counties in one state are assigned to a local market for which
the primary city (and the local broadcast stations) are in another state. Under
current rules, satellite and cable operators are prohibited or restricted from
providing to subscribers in these “orphan counties” the signals of in-state, but
non-local broadcast stations. Representative Ross has introduced H.R. 3216,
which would modify existing statutes to allow satellite and cable operators to
retransmit certain in-state broadcast signals into orphan counties.
• Currently, satellite operators are allowed, but not required, to offer subscribers
the signals of all the broadcast stations in their local market. DirecTV and DISH
Network have chosen not to offer such “local-into-local” service in small markets
representing about 3% of U.S. television households. They argue that it would
cost more to provide such service than they could recover in revenues and that
their limited capacity could be better used providing high definition and other
services in more densely populated areas. H.R. 927, introduced by Representative
Stupak, would require operators to offer local-into-local service in all markets.
• A number of statutory provisions, and many Federal Communications
Commission and Copyright Office rules adopted to implement statutory
provisions, are based on the transmission of analog broadcast signals, but during
2009 the required transition to digital broadcast signals will largely be achieved.
As a result, some of the existing statutes and rules may no longer be effective in
attaining the objectives for which they were enacted, unless they are modified.
The House Commerce Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet
has favorably reported H.R. 2994 (introduced by Representative Boucher), which
narrowly addresses SHVERA provisions requiring reauthorization and the current
statutory references to analog technology in the relevant provisions in the
Communications Act. The House Judiciary Committee has circulated a discussion draft
bill that would reauthorize the satellite statutory copyright license, update the license to
reflect the transition to all-digital transmissions, and clarify certain aspects of the satellite
and cable statutory licenses. This report will be updated as warranted.

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Reauthorizing the Satellite Home Viewing Provisions

Contents
Overview .................................................................................................................................... 1
Introduction .......................................................................................................................... 1
Issues in the Current Public Policy Debate ............................................................................ 4
Differences in the Current Retransmission and Copyright Rules for Satellite and Cable ............. 13
Providing the Signals of Non-Local but In-State Stations to Orphan Counties............................ 18
The Overall Issue ................................................................................................................ 18
Regulatory Parameters Available to Address Orphan Counties ............................................. 23
Current Obstacles to Serving Orphan Counties .................................................................... 26
News Programming of State-Wide Interest .................................................................... 27
Sports Programming of State-Wide Interest ................................................................... 28
Requiring Satellite Operators to Offer Local-into-Local Service in All Markets ......................... 30

Figures
Figure 1. Counties Assigned to Designated Market Areas for Which the Primary City Is
Outside the State (“Orphan Counties”), 2009.......................................................................... 21

Tables
Table 1. Current Retransmission and Copyright Rules for Satellite and Cable Operators............ 15
Table A-1. Counties and Television Households in Each State That Are Located in
Designated Market Areas (DMAs) for which the Primary City Is Outside the State................. 32

Appendixes
Appendix. “Orphan Counties”................................................................................................... 32

Contacts
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 67

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Reauthorizing the Satellite Home Viewing Provisions

Overview
Introduction
Congress has constructed a regulatory framework for the retransmission of broadcast television
signals by satellite television operators through a series of laws—the 1988 Satellite Home Viewer
Act (SHVA),1 the Satellite Home Viewer Act of 1994,2 the 1999 Satellite Home Viewer
Improvement Act (SHVIA),3 and the 2004 Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization
Act (SHVERA).4 These laws have fostered satellite provision of multichannel video
programming distribution (MVPD) service and, as satellite has become a viable competitor to
cable television, have attempted to make the regulatory regimes for satellite and cable more
similar. Today, the regulatory framework for satellite exists alongside an analogous, but in some
significant ways different, regulatory framework for cable.
The various provisions in these satellite acts created or modified sections in the Copyright Act5
and the Communications Act of 1934.6 Under current law, in order to retransmit a broadcaster’s
signals to its subscribers, a satellite operator or a cable operator, with certain exceptions, must
obtain a license from the copyright holders of the content contained in the broadcast for use of
that content and also must obtain the consent of the broadcaster for retransmission of the
broadcast signal. The statutory provisions addressing copyright are in the Copyright Act and are
administered by the Copyright Office in the Library of Congress; those provisions addressing
retransmission consent are in the Communications Act and are administered by the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC). But in several cases, the provisions in one act are
conditioned on meeting conditions prescribed in the other act or meeting rules adopted by the
agency that administers the other act.
SHVERA includes several provisions that will expire on December 31, 2009, unless they are
reauthorized. Most significantly,
• Section 119 of the Copyright Act7 provides satellite operators that retransmit
certain “distant” (non-local) broadcast television signals to their subscribers with
an efficient, relatively low cost way to license the copyrighted works contained in
those broadcast signals—a statutory per subscriber, per signal, per month royalty
fee. If the law expired, it would be very difficult (and perhaps impossible) for
satellite operators to offer the programming of broadcast networks8 to that subset

1 P.L. 100-667.
2 P.L. 103-369.
3 P.L. 106-113.
4 P.L. 108-447, passed as Division J of Title IX of the FY2005 Consolidated Appropriations Act.
5 17 U.S.C. §§ 111, 119, and 122.
6 47 U.S.C. §§ 325, 335, 338, 339, 340, and 341.
7 17 U.S.C. §119.
8 A network is defined as an entity that offers an interconnected program service on a regular basis for 15 or more hours
per week to at least 25 affiliated television licensees in 10 or more states. (17 U.S.C. § 119(d)(2)(A) and 47 U.S.C. §
339(d)(2)(A)) In addition to the four major television networks—ABC, CBS, Fox, and NBC—that provide national
news as well as entertainment programming aimed at a general audience, there are several networks—Univision,
Telefutura, and Telemundo—that offer news and entertainment targeted to ethnic communities, as well as smaller
(continued...)
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of subscribers who currently cannot receive that programming from local
broadcast stations that are affiliated with those networks.9 It also would be
difficult for satellite operators to offer their subscribers the signals of distant
stations that are not affiliated with broadcast networks, such as “superstations”.10
In addition, section 119 provides those satellite operators that retransmit to their
subscribers the signals of stations that are located outside the local market in
which the subscriber is located but that are “significantly viewed” by those
households in the local market that do not subscribe to any MVPD provider, a
royalty-free license for the copyrighted works contained in those broadcast
signals.11 If section 119 expired, it would be very difficult (and perhaps
impossible) for satellite operators to offer their subscribers the signals of
significantly viewed stations.

(...continued)
networks that provide entertainment or religious programming to their affiliates. Section 119(d)(2)(B) of the Copyright
Act defines “network station” to also include noncommercial broadcast stations.
9 This would include subscribers who are not able to receive network programming because either (1) the satellite
operator does not offer the signals of the local broadcast stations and the subscribers are located too far from the
transmitter to receive the signals of the local network-affiliated stations over-the-air or (2) there is no network-affiliated
station in the local market. The specific household eligibility requirements for receiving distant signals are very
complex, and include certain grandfathered exceptions, but as a general rule households that can receive the signals of
local broadcast television stations either over-the-air or as part of local-into-local satellite service are not eligible to
receive distant network signals and would not be affected by the expiration of this provision.
10 The provisions in the two acts have sometimes created confusion because they define “superstations” differently. The
Communications Act identifies a class of “nationally distributed superstations” (47 U.S.C. § 339(d)(2)) that is limited
to six stations that were in operation prior to May 1, 1991. These are independent broadcast television stations whose
broadcast signals are picked up and redistributed by satellite to local cable television operators and to satellite
television operators all across the United States. These nationally distributed superstations in effect function like a
cable network rather than a local broadcast television station or a broadcast television network. The nationally
distributed superstations are WTBS, Atlanta; WOR and WPIX, New York; WSBK, Boston; WGN, Chicago; KTLA,
Los Angeles; and KTVT, Dallas. All of these nationally distributed superstations carry the games of professional sports
teams. It has become common in FCC proceedings and discussions to refer to these nationally distributed superstations
as simply “superstations.” In addition to these independent nationally distributed superstations, there also are many
independent television stations that are not nationally distributed superstations. This distinction is important because
under section 325(b)(2)(B) of the Communications Act, satellite operators may retransmit the signals of “superstations”
without obtaining the consent of the stations if they abide by the FCC’s network non-duplication and syndicated
exclusivity rules (which are discussed later in this report), but this exemption from the retransmission consent
requirement does apply to the retransmission of the signals of other independent stations. On the other hand, the
Copyright Act defines “superstation” as “a television station, other than a network station, licensed by the Federal
Communications Commission, that is secondarily transmitted by a satellite carrier.” (17 U.S.C. § 119(d)(9)) Thus,
under the Copyright Act, all independent stations are superstations and the copyright provisions apply the same way to
all independent stations. The House Judiciary Committee discussion draft bill would eliminate the current definitional
inconsistency between the acts by replacing the word “superstation” with “non-network station” throughout the
Copyright Act.
11 The specific threshold viewing level for a “significantly viewed” station are, for a network affiliate station, a market
share of at least 3% of total weekly viewing hours in the market and a net weekly circulation of 25%; for independent
stations, 2% of total weekly viewing hours and a net weekly circulation of 5%. The share of viewing hours refers to the
total hours that households that do not receive television signals from MVPDs viewed the subject station during the
week, expressed as a percentage of the total hours these households viewed all stations during the week. Net weekly
circulation refers to the number of households that do not receive television signals from MVPDs that viewed the
station for 5 minutes or more during the entire week, expressed as a percentage of the total households that do not
receive television signals from MVPDs in the survey area. A satellite operator can retransmit the signals of these
significantly viewed stations only with the retransmission consent of the station.
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• Section 325(b)(2)(C) of the Communications Act12 allows a satellite operator to
retransmit the signals of distant network stations, without first obtaining the
retransmission consent of those distant stations, to those subscribing households
who cannot receive the signals of local broadcast television network affiliates.13
If it expired, a satellite operator would have to negotiate compensation terms
with those distant network stations whose signals it retransmitted to those
“unserved” subscribers.
• Section 325(b)(3)(C)(ii) of the Communications Act14 prohibits a television
broadcast station that provides retransmission consent from engaging in
exclusive contracts for carriage or failing to negotiate in good faith. Section
325(b)(3)(iii)15 prohibits an MVPD from failing to negotiate in good faith for
retransmission consent.
The satellite and cable regulatory frameworks attempt to balance a number of longstanding, but
potentially conflicting, public policy goals—most notably, localism, competitive provision of
video services, support for the creative process, and preservation of free over-the-air broadcast
television. They also attempt to balance the interests of the satellite, cable, and broadcast
industries. Congress incorporated the sunset provisions in SHVERA because of its concern that
market changes could affect these balances.
The statutory provisions distinguish between the retransmission of local signals—the broadcast
signals of stations located in the same local market as the subscriber—and of distant signals.
Provisions block or restrict the retransmission of many distant broadcast signals in order to
protect the local broadcasters from competition from distant signals and to provide them with a
stronger negotiating position vis-à-vis the satellite and cable operators, with the intention of
fostering local programming. But the regulatory framework also recognizes that U.S. households
benefit from the receipt of certain distant broadcast signals and includes explicit retransmission
and copyright rules for these.
The regulatory framework for satellite sets the parameters within which industry players must
conduct business. It provides answers to three fundamental business questions:
• may—or must—the satellite operator retransmit certain categories of local or
distant broadcast signals?16 If so,
• is retransmission of those signals contingent on the satellite operator receiving
the prior retransmission consent of—and providing compensation to—the
broadcaster? and
• is use of the content on those signals subject to specific copyright license terms?
Industry players also must conduct business within the context of the longstanding industry
practice of broadcast program suppliers—both broadcast networks and owners of non-network,

12 47 U.S.C. § 325(b)(2)(C).
13 See footnote 9.
14 47 U.S.C. § 325(b)(3)(C)(ii).
15 47 U.S.C. § 325(b)(3)(C)(iii).
16 This is formally referred to in the statute as “secondary transmission” of the broadcast signals. The initial
transmission of the signals by the broadcast station is the “primary transmission.”
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syndicated programming—contractually granting individual broadcast television stations the
exclusive broadcast rights to that programming in a geographic area and restricting those
broadcast stations from allowing other parties to retransmit the station signals carrying that
programming beyond the area of exclusivity. Thus, in some situations where the regulatory
framework allows satellite (or cable) operators to retransmit the signals of a distant (non-local)
broadcast station, subject to obtaining the permission of the broadcast station, that station may
be—and, in practice, often is—contractually prohibited from granting the MVPD retransmission
consent.
Issues in the Current Public Policy Debate
The current policy debate is motivated by, but not limited to, the potential need to address
the statutory copyright and retransmission consent provisions that will expire on
December 31, 2009. On June 25, 2009, the Subcommittee on Communications,
Technology, and the Internet, of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, agreed
by voice vote to favorably report H.R. 2994 to the full committee. The bill, which was
introduced by Representative Boucher, the subcommittee chairman, focuses narrowly on
the expiring non-copyright provisions in SHVERA.17 But the discussion at a June 16,
2009 subcommittee legislative hearing extended beyond those provisions and
Representative Boucher has stated “There are additional matters that are not addressed in
H.R. 2994 that are the subjects of ongoing discussions between now and the full
Committee markup.”18 To date, two policy issues are receiving the most attention.
Carriage of Adjacent In-State, But Non-Local, Broadcast Signals: Under
current statutes and rules, a number of counties are assigned to local markets for
which the principal city (from which all or most of the local television signals
originate) is outside their state. Satellite subscribers (and many cable subscribers)
in these “orphan counties” may not be receiving signals from in-state broadcast
stations and as a result may not be receiving news, sports, and public affairs
programming of interest in their state. Some observers therefore have proposed
that the statutory framework be modified to remove prohibitions or impediments
on satellite operators retransmitting to their subscribers in these counties the
signals of broadcast stations in in-state, but non-local, markets. Broadcasters,
however, have voiced concern that allowing such retransmission could
undermine their financial viability by reducing their audience share and thus
reducing their advertising revenues. They also assert such retransmission would
weaken the local broadcasters’ negotiating position with the satellite and cable
operators, who could turn to the programming of an in-state but out-of-market
affiliate of a particular network if they failed to reach retransmission consent with
the local affiliate of that network. Broadcasters claim this would harm their
ability to provide quality local programming, which is expensive to produce.19
Representative Ross has introduced H.R. 3216, which would allow multichannel

17 Copyright issues are within the jurisdiction of the Judiciary Committee.
18 Statement of Congressman Rick Boucher, “Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet
Markup: H.R. 2994: Bill to Reauthorize the Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act,” June 25, 2009.
19 See, for example, John Eggerton, “Affiliate Associations Warn Legislators Against Allowing Imported Signals from
In-State, Distant Markets,” Broadcasting & Cable, March 30, 2009. The issues relating to MVPD retransmission of
non-local in-state broadcast signals to orphan counties are discussed in greater detail in a later section of this report.
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video programming distributors (MVPDs)—satellite operators and cable
operators (including telephone companies)—located in an orphan county to
retransmit the signals of television broadcast stations located in an adjacent in-
state market. In addition, the Four Corners Television Access Act of 2009 has
been introduced in both the House (H.R. 1860, by Representatives Salazar and
Coffman) and the Senate (S. 771, by Senators Bennet and Udall) to allow satellite
operators to retransmit the signals of certain in-state broadcast stations to
subscribers located in two Colorado counties that are assigned to the
Albuquerque, NM local market and to allow cable operators located in those
counties to retransmit the signals of certain in-state stations without having to
obtain retransmission consent from the stations.20
Discretionary vs. Mandatory Local Carriage: Currently, satellite operators are
allowed, but not required, to offer subscribers the signals of all the broadcast
stations in their local market. If a satellite operator chooses to retransmit the
signal of a local broadcast station, it must retransmit the primary signals of all the
stations in that local market, subject to obtaining local station permission. The
satellite operators have chosen not to offer this “local-into-local” service in many
small markets, preferring to use their satellite capacity to provide additional high
definition and other programming to larger, more lucrative markets than to use
the capacity to serve very small numbers of customers. In some cases, those
small markets may not generate enough revenues to cover the costs of providing
local-into-local service.21 As a result approximately 3% of all U.S. households do
not have access to local broadcast signals if they subscribe to satellite video
service.22 Representative Stupak has introduced H.R. 927, which would require
satellite operators to offer local-into-local service in all markets.23 The House
Judiciary Committee discussion draft includes a provision that would address this
issue from a different perspective. As a result of repeated violations of section
119 of the Copyright Act, DISH Network currently is subject to a permanent
court injunction barring it from retransmitting distant signals to its subscribers.

20 Also, Representative Boren has introduced H.R. 505, which would allow satellite operators to retransmit to any
subscriber in the state of Oklahoma—not just those in adjacent counties—the signals of any broadcast station located in
that state.
21 Paul Gallant, an analyst with Stanford Washington Research Group, reportedly stated that mandatory provision of
local-into-local service in all markets “would impose significant new costs on Dish Network and DirecTV and generate
virtually no new revenue” because the markets in question are so small. See Todd Shields, “DirecTV, Dish May Face
Requirement for More Local TV (Update1),” Bloomberg.com, February 23, 2009, available at http://www.bloomberg.
com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=ayQ_vo3nJImo, viewed on April 27, 2009.
22 According to the written testimony of Charles W. Ergen, chairman, president, and chief executive officer of DISH
Network Corporation, submitted for the hearing on “Reauthorization of the Satellite Home Viewer Extension and
Reauthorization Act,” before the Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet, Committee on
Energy and Commerce, U.S. House of Representatives, February 24, 2009, at p. 2, “DISH provides local service in 178
markets today, reaching 97 percent of households nationwide.” According to the written testimony of Bob Gabrielli,
senior vice president, broadcasting operations and distribution, DIRECTV, Inc., before the House Judiciary Committee,
February 25, 2009, at p. 10, “DIRECTV today offers local television stations by satellite in 150 of the 210 local
markets in the United States, serving 95 percent of American households. (Along with DISH Network, we offer local
service to 98 percent of American households.)”
23 The debate over mandatory satellite provision of local-into-local service in all markets is discussed later in this
report.
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The discussion draft would waive the injunction if DISH Network provides local-
into-local service in all 210 local markets in the United States.24
In the debate about reauthorization of the sunsetting provisions in SHVERA, a number of other
policy issues are likely to be raised and may be addressed in legislation.
Revising Existing Rules That Are Based on Analog Technology: A number of
statutory provisions, and many FCC and Copyright Office rules adopted to
implement statutory provisions, are based on the transmission of analog
broadcast signals, but during 2009 the transition to digital broadcast signals will
largely be achieved. As a result, statutes and rules that explicitly refer to analog
technology may no longer be effective in attaining the objectives for which they
were initially enacted, unless they are modified. A number of parties have stated
that it is timely to make such modifications. Marybeth Peters, Register of
Copyrights, has proposed five modifications to Section 111 of the Copyright Law
and four modifications to Section 119 of the Copyright Act “to accommodate the
conversion from analog to digital broadcasting.”25 For example, under current
law, satellite subscribers who are not able to receive a grade B quality analog
television signal26 (and are thus considered “unserved”) are allowed to receive
distant signals if their satellite operator is not offering local-into-local service,
and some unserved subscribers are allowed to receive distant signals even if their
operator does offer local-into-local service. Although the definition of unserved is
based on analog technology, those households also are considered unserved for
digital service and thus may in some circumstances be allowed to receive distant
digital signals by satellite. Representative Boucher’s bill, H.R. 2994, includes
specific proposed changes to current language in the Communications Act

24 Some observers have expressed concern that the discussion draft would leave it to the Copyright Office, which does
not have adjudicatory experience or technical communications expertise, to make a determination that DISH Network
has willfully and intentionally stopped providing local-into-local service in all markets or is in fact making a good faith
effort to serve all markets. These observers have suggested that this responsibility is better left to the FCC, which has
the requisite adjudicatory experience and technical expertise.
25 Marybeth Peters, Register of Copyrights, written statement before the House Judiciary Committee, hearing on
“Copyright Licensing in a Digital Age: Competition, Compensation and the Need to Update the Cable and Satellite TV
Licenses,” at Appendix 1, February 25, 2009. The proposed modifications to section 111 include revising section 111,
and its terms and conditions, to expressly address the retransmission of digital broadcast signals; amending the
definition of “local service area of a primary transmitter” to include references to digital station “noise limited service
contours” for purposes of defining the local/distant status of noncommercial educational stations (and certain UHF
stations) for statutory royalty purposes; amending the statutory definition of “distant signal equivalent” (DSE) to clarify
that the royalty payment is for the retransmission of the copyrighted content without regard to the transmission format;
amending the definitions of “primary transmission” and “secondary transmission,” as well as the “station” definitions
in section 111(f) so they comport to the amended definition of DSE; and clarifying that each multicast stream of a
digital television station shall be treated as a separate DSE for section 111 royalty purposes. The proposed
modifications to section 119 include replacing the existing Grade B analog standard with the new noise-limited digital
signal intensity standard; adopting the Individual Location Longley Rice (ILLR) predictive digital methodology for
predicting whether a household can receive an acceptable digital signal from a local digital network station; mandating
that the FCC adopt digital signal testing procedures for purposes of determining whether a household is actually
unserved by a local digital signal; and deleting various references in section 119 to “analog” unless that reference is to
low power television stations that have not yet converted to digital broadcasting.
26 The Grade B contour around a station’s transmitter identifies the geographic area in which the quality of picture is
expected to be satisfactory to the median observer at least 90% of the time for at least 50% of the receiving locations
within the contour, in the absence of interfering co-channel and adjacent channel signals. (See Warren Communications
News, Television & Cable Factbook 2009, at p. A-16.
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intended to address this problem. It also includes a provision directing the FCC to
develop a predictive methodology for the reception of digital signals within six
months in order to determine which households are “unserved” and therefore
eligible to receive digital network signals. Similarly, the House Judiciary
Committee discussion draft includes specific proposed changes to current
language in the Copyright Act intended to replace existing references to analog
technology with relevant references to digital technology and also instructs the
FCC to establish a predictive model for the reception of digital signals.
Re-Defining Local Markets in the Relevant Satellite and Cable Statutes: The
current regulatory frameworks for both satellite and cable distinguish between
the retransmission of local and distant signals and require that local markets be
defined by the Designated Market Areas (DMAs) constructed and published by
Nielsen Media Research.27 The viewing patterns that underlie these Nielsen
markets are primarily the result of the physical locations of the various broadcast
television stations and the reach of their signals. (They also reflect the boundaries
of the exclusive broadcast territories that each of the three original television
broadcast networks—ABC, CBS, and NBC—had incorporated into their
contracts with their local affiliate stations decades ago.) DMAs do not take into
account state boundaries. Some parties argue that U.S. statutes and rules would
more effectively foster the dissemination of state and local news and public
affairs information if they incorporated local market definitions that more closely
conformed with state borders.
Carriage of Adjacent Network Affiliate Signals in Those Markets That Lack
a Network Affiliate: Currently, in local markets that are not served by an
affiliate of a particular broadcast network, satellite operators may retransmit the
distant signals of up to two distant stations affiliated with that network.28 (This
provision applies to all network stations, but in practice it primarily involves the
retransmission of distant signals into so-called “short markets” that do not have
local broadcast stations affiliated with each of the four major national broadcast
networks—ABC, CBS, FOX, and NBC.) The specific language in current rules
has been subject to two criticisms—one for allegedly allowing too many distant
signals into a market and one for allegedly unduly restricting distant signals.
Some observers have proposed that, rather than allowing satellite operators to
import the signals of any distant network affiliates, such importation of distant
network affiliate signals into a market be limited to the signals of affiliates in an
adjacent, in-state market, to maximize the likelihood that the programming
provided would contribute to localism.29 At the same time, under current rules, in
areas where DMAs are geographically small so that the signals of a network-
affiliated station extends into a neighboring DMA that does not have a local

27 The statutory provisions for satellite explicitly require the use of Nielsen’s DMAs. (17 U.S.C. § 122(j)(2)(A) and
(C).) The statutory provisions for cable instructed the FCC to make market determinations “using, where available,
commercial publications which delineate television markets based on viewing patterns.” (47 U.S.C. § 534(h)(1)(C).)
Nielsen had already delineated such television markets, assigning geographic areas to markets based on predominant
viewing patterns in order to construct ratings data for advertisers, and the FCC therefore adopted Nielsen’s market
delineations.
28 47 U.S.C. § 339.
29 See, for example, Cheryl Bolen, “Boucher Advises Broadcasters to Negotiate Performance Royalty,” BNA Daily
Report for Executives,
April 1, 2009.
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station affiliated with the same network, satellite subscribers in that neighboring
market are not considered to be “unserved” for that network and a satellite
operator needs to get the approval of the out-of-market station in order to bring a
distant network signal into the short market. The satellite operators have
proposed that current rules be modified to eliminate this so-called “Grade B
bleed” problem by modifying the test for a subscriber being unserved to apply
only to the strength of the signal from an in-market station or by defining
unserved in terms of whether the viewer can get local service from the satellite
spot beam, rather than in terms of over-the-air reception.30 The House Judiciary
Committee discussion would address this issue by defining as “unserved” those
households that do not receive an over-the-air signal with the network
programming from their local affiliate. The broadcasters and programmers
oppose such a change. They indicate that with the digital transition, the existing
broadcast stations in short markets have multicasting capabilities and therefore
can carry the programming of a second and perhaps even third network. Thus,
they claim, there are fewer and fewer short markets and these can be handled by
allowing or requiring satellite operators to carry all the network signals, even if
they are not a local broadcast station’s primary signal.31 On one hand, language in
the House Judiciary Committee discussion draft might facilitate the use of
multicasting to serve short markets because it would add to section 119 of the
Copyright Act a definition of “multicast transmission” as the transmission by a
television station that contains more than one channel or digital stream, each
containing its own distinct programming, and would clarify that copyright fees
should be established for each digital stream of programming in the event of a
multicast transmission. On the other hand, other language in the House Judiciary
Committee discussion draft might preclude this result. The draft would define an
unserved households as one that “cannot receive, through the use of a
conventional, stationary, outdoor rooftop receiving antenna, an over-the-air signal
containing the primary video of a primary network station located in that
household’s local market and affiliated with that network.... ” (emphasis added)
The discussion draft does not define “primary video,” but the term appears to be
intended to distinguish, for purposes of defining those unserved households that a
satellite operator may serve with distant network signals, between a multicasting
local broadcast station’s primary video stream and its other video streams. If
households that can receive the programming of a particular network from the
non-primary video stream of a local station are not considered “served” for the
purposes of that network, then a satellite operator could retransmit the signals of
a distant station affiliated with that network. This might reflect concern that non-
primary multicast streams are less likely than the primary stream to include
locally-produced programming.

30 See, for example, the written testimony of Derek Chang, executive vice president, content strategy and development,
DirecTV, Inc., before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, Subcommittee on Communication Technology,
and the Internet, June 16, 2009, at pp. 5-6.
31 See, for example, the written statement of Paul A Karpowicz, president, Meredith Broadcasting Group, on behalf of
the Television Board of the National Association of Broadcasters, before the Subcommittee on Communications,
Technology, and the Internet, House Committee on Energy and Commerce, “Hearing on Discussion Draft of
Legislation to Reauthorize the Satellite Home Viewer Act,” June 16, 2009, at p. 8.
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Mandatory Carriage of All the Programming Streams of Local
Noncommercial Educational Television Stations: By statute, providers of
direct broadcast satellite service (DirecTV and DISH Network) must reserve
between 4 and 7 percent of their channel capacity exclusively for noncommercial
programming of an educational or informational nature.32 But they are not
specifically required to retransmit the signals of local broadcast television
stations; they are allowed to do so on condition of carrying the primary signals of
all local stations (and must obtain the retransmission consent of the commercial,
but not of the noncommercial, stations). With the digital transition, broadcasters
now are able to broadcast multiple digital programming streams over their
licensed spectrum. DirecTV has reached a retransmission consent agreement with
public television stations to retransmit all of their video streams, but DISH
Network has not. Representative Eshoo has introduced H.R. 1155, which would
require that satellite operators retransmit to each subscriber the digital signals
(including all free, over-the-air digital programming streams) of each qualified
noncommercial educational television station located in the subscriber’s local
market. Where these noncommercial educational stations have created multiple
video streams, such a requirement might result in a satellite operator having to
allocate a portion of its channel capacity in excess of 4 to 7 percent to the
carriage of such streams. At the June 16, 2009 House hearing, Representative
Eshoo stated that she has prepared her bill out of frustration that DISH Network
has failed to reach an agreement to retransmit all the programming streams of
public television stations and that it may not be negotiating in good faith, but that
she would prefer that DISH Network reach a carriage agreement on its own
accord, without a legislative requirement.
Regulatory Parity for Satellite and Cable Operators: As will be discussed in
the next section, although satellite and cable operators compete directly with one
another in most markets, there are significant differences in the regulatory
frameworks under which they operate. Some observers have proposed that the
retransmission, copyright, and other rules under which these competing
multichannel video programming distributors operate should be rationalized to
eliminate artificial competitive advantages or disadvantages. For example, the
Copyright Office, in a report to Congress required by SHVERA,33 has proposed
that the gross receipts royalty system for cable retransmission of distant
broadcast signals in section 111 of the Copyright Act be replaced by a flat fee per
subscriber system of the sort for satellite retransmission of distant broadcast
signals in section 119 of the Copyright Act. The Copyright Office also has
proposed34 that the provisions defining satellite subscriber eligibility for
receiving distant signals in section 119 (the “unserved household” provisions) be
replaced by the imposition on satellite operators of the FCC’s network non-
duplication35 and syndicated exclusivity rules36 (but not its sports blackout37

32 47 U.S.C. § 335(b)(1).
33 Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act Section 109 Report, A Report of the Register of
Copyrights, June 2008, at pp. ix-xi and 94-180.
34 Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act Section 109 Report, A Report of the Register of
Copyrights, June 2008, at pp. 167-168.
35 47 C.F.R. §§ 76.92, 76.93, 76.106, 76.120, and 76.122. Commercial television station licensees that have contracted
with a broadcast network for the exclusive distribution rights to that network’s programming within a specified
(continued...)
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rules), which currently are used to limit the retransmission of distant broadcast
signals by cable operators.
Allowable Signal Formats for the Retransmission of Significantly Viewed
Stations: The satellite operators state that although both cable and satellite
operators may offer significantly viewed stations, only satellite operators are
subject to an “equivalent bandwidth” provision that, as interpreted by the FCC,
requires the satellite operator to carry the signals of a significantly viewed station
that is affiliated to the same network as a local station in the same format as that
local station every moment of the day. Thus, for example, if the local station is
not transmitting its programming in high definition format, the satellite carrier is
not allowed to retransmit into the market the signals of the significantly viewed
station in high definition format. According to satellite operators, this is
infeasible and the requirement should be repealed.38 H.R. 2994 includes a

(...continued)
geographic area are entitled to block a local cable system from carrying any programming of a more distant television
broadcast station that duplicates that network programming. Commercial broadcast stations may assert these non-
duplication rights regardless of whether or not the network programming is actually being retransmitted by the local
cable system and regardless of when, or if, the network programming is scheduled to be broadcast. This rule applies to
cable systems with more than 1,000 subscribers. Generally, the zone of protection for such programming cannot exceed
35 miles for broadcast stations licensed to a community in the FCC’s list of top 100 television markets or 55 miles for
broadcast stations licensed to communities in smaller television markets. The non-duplication rule does not apply when
the cable system community falls, in whole or in part, within the distant station’s Grade B signal contour. In addition, a
cable operator does not have to delete the network programming of any station that the FCC has previously recognized
as “significantly viewed” in the cable community. With respect to satellite operators, the network non-duplication rule
applies only to network signals transmitted by superstations, not to network signals transmitted by other distant
network affiliates.
36 47 C.F.R. §§ 76.101, 76.103, 76.106, 76.120, and 76.123. Cable systems that serve at least 1,000 subscribers may be
required, upon proper notification, to provide syndicated protection to broadcasters who have contracted with program
suppliers for exclusive exhibition rights to certain programs within specific geographic areas, whether or not the cable
system affected is carrying the station requesting this protection. However, no cable system is required to delete a
program broadcast by a station that either is significantly viewed in the cable community or places a Grade B or better
contour over the community of the cable system. With respect to satellite operators, the syndicated exclusivity rule
applies only to syndicated programming transmitted by superstations, not to syndicated programming transmitted by
other distant broadcast stations.
37 47 C.F.R. §§ 76.111, 76.120, 76.127, and 76.128. A cable system located within 35 miles of the city of license of a
broadcast station where a sporting event is taking place may not carry the live television broadcast of the sporting event
on its system if the event is not available live on a local television broadcast station, if the holder of the broadcast rights
to the event, or its agent, requests such a blackout. The holder of the rights is responsible for notifying the cable
operator of its request for program deletion at least the Monday preceding the calendar week during which the deletion
is desired. If no television broadcast station is licensed to the community in which the sports event is taking place, the
35-mile blackout zone extends from the broadcast station’s licensed community with which the sports event or team is
identified. If the event or local team is not identified with any particular community, (for instance, the New England
Patriots), the 35-mile blackout zone extends from the community nearest the sports event which has a licensed
broadcast station. The sports blackout rule does not apply to cable television systems serving fewer than 1,000
subscribers, nor does it require deletion of a sports event on a broadcast station’s signal that was carried by a cable
system prior to March 31, 1972. The rule does not apply to sports programming carried on non-broadcast program
distribution networks such as ESPN. These networks, however, may be subject to private contractual blackout
restrictions. Similarly, the sports blackout rule applies to satellite operators only if a local television broadcast station is
not carrying the local sports event. If a local broadcast station does not have permission to carry the local game, then no
other broadcaster’s signal displaying the game can be shown in the protected local blackout zone. The sports blackout
rule applies to a satellite operator’s retransmission of nationally distributed superstations and network affiliated
stations. The rule exempts satellite operators with fewer than 1,000 subscribers in the protected area.
38 See, for example, the written testimony of Derek Chang, executive vice president, content strategy and development,
DirecTV, Inc., before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, Subcommittee on Communication Technology,
(continued...)
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provision that would clarify that a significantly viewed signal may only be
provided in high definition format if the satellite carrier is passing through all of
the high definition programming of the corresponding local station in high
definition format as well; if the local station is not providing programming in
high definition format, then the satellite operator is not restricted from providing
the significantly viewed station’s signal in high definition format.
Proposals to Modify Current Retransmission Consent Rules: Under the
“retransmission consent/must carry” election adopted by Congress in 1992, every
three years each local commercial television broadcast station licensee must
choose between (1) negotiating retransmission consent agreement with the cable
systems operating in its service area, and thus receiving compensation from the
cable operators for such carriage, or (2) requiring each cable system operating in
the service area to carry its signal, but receiving no compensation for such
carriage.39 Broadcast stations with popular programming tend to choose the first
option; those with less popular programming, the latter. These rules apply to
telephone companies, such as Verizon and AT&T, that offer MVPD services that
meet the definition of cable service. The rules are somewhat different for satellite
providers of MVPD service. If a satellite operator offers local-into-local service
in a market, it must retransmit the primary signals of every broadcast station in
the local market that gives retransmission permission. Thus all MVPDs must
obtain the permission of a local station in order to retransmit that station’s
signals. In 1992, cable operators were the only MVPDs in a broadcaster’s service
area and they could refuse to pay compensation for retransmitting the
broadcaster’s signal because the broadcaster would lose advertising revenues if
its signal were not carried by the cable operator. Now that there are competing
MVPDs, broadcasters with popular, “must have” programming are in a stronger
negotiating position, because if an MVPD fails to reach a retransmission
agreement with a broadcaster it could risk losing many subscribers to a
competing MVPD that has such an agreement. Local broadcasters today often
receive per subscriber fees from MVPDs for the retransmission of their
programming, just as cable networks do. Small cable operators represented by
the American Cable Association have argued that they are placed in an especially
disadvantageous position with broadcasters in retransmission consent
negotiations, because they must compete against large satellite and telephone
companies that can negotiate better terms with local broadcasters. They therefore
have proposed that retransmission consent rules be modified to prohibit
broadcasters from charging discriminatory rates for retransmission consent40 and
that the terms of all retransmission consent agreements, which currently are kept
confidential, be made public to allow parties and the FCC to detect any
discrimination.

(...continued)
and the Internet, June 16, 2009, at pp. 6-7.
39 47 U.S.C. §§ 325, 338, and 534.
40 See, for example, the Statement of Matthew M. Polka, president and CEO, American Cable Association, before the
Federal Communications Commission En Banc Hearing on Broadband and the Digital Future, Pittsburgh, PA, July 21,
2008.
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Proposals to Eliminate the Statutory Copyright Licensing System for Cable
and Satellite Retransmission of Distant Broadcast Signals: The United States
Copyright Office has proposed that Congress abolish sections 111 and 119 of the
Copyright Law, arguing that the statutory licensing systems created by these
provisions result in lower payments to copyright holders than would be made if
compensation were left to market negotiations.41 According to the Copyright
Office, the cable and satellite industries no longer are nascent entities in need of
government subsidies, have substantial market power, and are able to negotiate
private agreements with copyright owners for programming carried on distant
broadcast signals. Other parties argue that the current licensing systems are
efficient and that the purpose of copyright law is to balance the potentially
conflicting goals of fostering the dissemination of copyrighted material and
allowing the copyright holder to be compensated by giving the copyright holder a
limited monopoly over its material; they oppose a rule that allows the copyright
holder to fully exploit its monopoly power to receive whatever the market would
bear.42 The House Judiciary Committee discussion draft would phase out the
compulsory licenses available to satellite and cable operators, eliminating section
111, 119, and 122 licenses once a single source market license is available. That
is, if a broadcaster could demonstrate that it controlled the copyrights to all the
content on its signals, it could negotiate a single source license agreement with
each satellite and cable operator, rather than having to accept the statutory license
terms.43
Retransmission of Programming for National Emergencies: In times of
national emergency, the federal government may seek the widest possible
dispersal of information to aid in monitoring and responding to the situation. But
current copyright licensing rules may place restrictions on what content on
broadcast signals satellite operators may retransmit. The House Judiciary
Committee discussion draft therefore includes provisions that would permit
satellite operators to retransmit programming that would otherwise be
unavailable under their copyright license, when deemed necessary by the
Secretary of Homeland Security. The discussion draft would require the Secretary
of Homeland Security to issue regulations governing these retransmission
requests and provide an annual report to Congress.
Modification of Copyright Administrative Procedures and Requirements:
Various interested parties have proposed changes to the current administrative
procedures and requirements relating to the various satellite and cable copyright
licenses. The House Judiciary Committee discussion draft includes proposed
changes to the statutory requirements for, among other things, filing fees, audit
rights for copyright holders, verification statements of accounting and royalty
fees, the process for determining royalty rates, maximum statutory damages and
penalties for recurring violations of the law, the treatment for royalties when

41 Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act Section 109 Report, A Report of the Register of
Copyrights, June 2008, at p. xiv.
42 See, for example, the website of Public Knowledge at http://www.publicknowledge.org/issues/copyright.
43 The House Judiciary Committee has indicated that it anticipates that as stakeholders weigh in on how a single source
market licensing procedure should operate, the text in the current discussion draft will change.
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distant signals are retransmitted to some but not all communities in a market, and
reporting requirements for the retransmission of significantly viewed stations.
Grandfathering household eligibility for the receipt of distant signals: The
primary mechanism for limiting satellite retransmission of distant network
signals has been to restrict such retransmission to “unserved” households that
cannot receive the network programming because either (1) the satellite operator
is not offering local-into-local service in that market and the households cannot
receive a signal of a threshold quality level over-the-air from the local network
affiliate, or (2) there is no local affiliate offering the programming of that
network. But current rules include a number of grandfathered exceptions to those
eligibility restrictions, so that many households that are able to receive network
signals from their local broadcast stations can continue to demand the distant
signals. Both H.R. 2994 (from the Commerce subcommittee) and the House
Judiciary Committee discussion draft would retain most of those grandfathered
exceptions. On one hand, it may not be much of a burden on the satellite
operators to continue to offer the distant signals to grandfathered subscribers if
they would be using capacity on their broad beams and satellites to uplink and
downlink those signals anyway. On the other hand, such grandfathering of the
importation of distant signals (primarily from New York and Los Angeles)
undermines the policy of fostering localism, even if only on the margin.
Differences in the Current Retransmission and
Copyright Rules for Satellite and Cable

The four statutes that created and modified the regulatory framework for satellite sought to foster
satellite provision of MVPD service as a competitive alternative to cable service and, as satellite
became a viable competitor, to make the satellite and cable regulatory regimes more similar. But
many differences remain. For example,
• Cable operators must abide by the retransmission consent/must carry elections of
the broadcast stations located in their DMAs and therefore must retransmit to
their subscribers the primary signals of the local stations unless a station does not
grant retransmission permission. While satellite operators must retransmit the
signals of all eligible local broadcast stations if they choose to retransmit any, and
such retransmission is subject to obtaining the retransmission permission of the
station, an operator can choose not to offer any local signals by not offering
local-into-local service in a DMA.
• Both satellite and cable operators are subject to restrictions on the distant signals
that they can offer their subscribers. The primary regulatory mechanisms for
restricting cable retransmission of distant signals are the FCC’s network non-
duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules that require the cable operator to
black out distant programming that duplicates local programming. The primary
mechanisms for restricting satellite retransmission are a complex array of rules
that confine the retransmission of distant network signals to those subscribers
deemed “unserved.”
• Although both satellite and cable operators are subject to statutory copyright
licensing for the retransmission of distant non-network station and network
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station signals, the license fees for satellite operators are set on a flat per
subscriber, per distant station carried basis, while the license fees for cable
operators are based on the cable operator’s gross revenues.
• Cable operators are required to retransmit to their subscribers the signals of
stations that are located outside the DMA in which the cable system is located but
that are “significantly viewed” by those households in the cable service area that
do not subscribe to any MVPD provider, if the significantly viewed station gives
retransmission permission. In contrast, satellite operators are permitted, but not
required, to retransmit to their subscribers the signals of significantly viewed
stations, but if there is a local station with the same network affiliation as the
significantly viewed station, the satellite operator also must retransmit that local
station’s signals; the satellite operator must obtain the retransmission consent of
the significantly viewed station (though such consent is not required if there is no
local station affiliated to the same network as the significantly viewed station).
Table 1 compares some key retransmission and copyright provisions for satellite and cable to
identify similarities and differences.44 It is noteworthy that, although the satellite and cable
retransmission consent provisions are found in the Communications Act and the satellite and
cable copyright provisions are found in the Copyright Act, two of these provisions—one in the
Communications Act covering retransmission consent and one in the Copyright Act covering a
statutory copyright license—do not stand on their own, but rather are contingent either on a party
meeting a requirement in a different act or meeting a requirement of the FCC.45

44 The table does not present an exhaustive list of retransmission and copyright rules. Nor does it present the detailed
eligibility requirements for a subscriber to be considered “unserved;” the eligibility rules are replete with exceptions
and many pages long.
45 Thus section 339(a)(1)(A) of the Communications Act states: “Subject to section 119 of title 17, United States Code
[the Copyright Act], any satellite carrier shall be permitted to provide the signals of no more than two network stations
in a single day for each television network to any household not located within the local markets of those network
stations.” Similarly, sections 111(b)(1), (2), and (3) of the Copyright Act state it is not an infringement of copyright if
(1) the primary transmission is made by a broadcast station licensed by the FCC; and (2) the carriage of the signals
comprising the secondary transmission is required under the rules of the FCC; and (3) the signal of the primary
transmitter is not altered or changed in any way by the secondary transmitter. A cable provider that meets these three
requirements then qualifies for a royalty-free copyright license for the retransmission of local broadcast signals.
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Table 1. Current Retransmission and Copyright Rules
for Satellite and Cable Operators
Issue
Satellite Operators
Cable Operators
Local Signals:
A satellite operator is allowed, but not required, to
A cable operator is required to
Retransmission
retransmit to its subscribers the signals of broadcast
retransmit to its subscribers the
television stations in their local market (the DMA in
primary signals of all the full-power
which the subscriber is located); if a satellite operator commercial broadcast television
chooses to offer such “local-into-local” service, it
stations, qualified noncommercial
must provide the primary signals of all the full-power
educational television stations, and
stations in that local market, subject to obtaining local qualified low-power television stations
station permission. (47 U.S.C. 338(a)(1)) If the signals located in the DMA in which the cable
of two commercial stations in the DMA are
operator is located, up to a certain
substantially duplicative, the satellite operator need
percentage of its capacity, and subject
not carry both signals, unless they originate in
to obtaining local station permission; a
different states. (47 U.S.C. 338(c)) The satellite
cable operator may retransmit the
operator may include in its local-into-local service the signals of other (non-qualified
signals of local low power stations. (47 U.S.C.
noncommercial and low power stations)
338(a)(3))
local stations, subject to obtaining the
permission of those stations. (47 U.S.C.
534(a) and (b) and 535(a) and (b) and
325(b))
Local Signals:
Secondary transmission of a local broadcast signal by
Secondary transmission of a local
Copyright
a satellite operator is subject to statutory copyright
broadcast signal by a cable operator is
licensing with no royalty fee. (17 U.S.C. 122(c))
not considered an infringement of
copyright. (17 U.S.C. 111(b) and 47
U.S.C. 534(a) and (b) and 535(a) and
(b))
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Issue
Satellite Operators
Cable Operators
Distant Signals:
A satellite operator is allowed to retransmit (1) the
A cable operator is allowed to
Retransmission
signals of distant non-network stations (both
retransmit the signals of all distant
“national y distributed superstations” and other
broadcast television station signals
independent stations) to all of its subscribers, (2) the
subject to complying with the FCC’s
signals of distant “significantly viewed” stations to
network non-duplication, syndicated
subscribers located in the markets for which those
exclusivity, and sports blackout rules
stations qualify as significantly viewed, and (3) the
and subject to obtaining the consent of
signals of up to two distant stations affiliated with a
those distant stations (except that cable
network, to that subset of subscribers who are
operators do not need to obtain
deemed “unserved” by any local affiliate of that
retransmission consent from nationally
network—subscribers who cannot receive the signals
distributed superstations). (47 U.S.C.
of a local network-affiliated station because either (a)
325(b)(1) and 325(b)(2)(D) and 47 CFR
the satellite operator does not offer local-into-local
76.92-76.111) An MVPD does not need
service in the local market and the subscribers are
to obtain consent to retransmit the
located too far from the transmitter to receive signals signal of a noncommercial television
of a certain quality over-the-air, or (b) the network
broadcast station. (47 U.S.C.
does not have a local network-affiliated station in
325(b)(2)(A))
their market; a satellite operator also may retransmit
distant network signals in a small number of
grandfathered situations in which subscribers who do
have access to local-into-local service continue to be
eligible to receive distant signals from their satellite
operator. (47 U.S.C. 339(a) and (c) and 340(b)(3)) A
satellite operator does not need to obtain consent to
retransmit the signal of a nationally distributed
superstation if it complies with the FCC’s network
non-duplication, syndicated exclusivity, and sports
blackout rules. (47 U.S.C. 325(b)(2)(B)) To
retransmit the signals of a distant network station to
“unserved” subscribers, a satellite operator does not
need to obtain the consent of that distant network
station nor comply with the FCC’s network non-
duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules. (47 U.S.C.
325(b)((2)(C) and 340(e)(2)) To retransmit the
signals of a significantly viewed station, a satellite
operator must obtain the retransmission consent of
the station but does not have to comply with the
FCC’s network non-duplication and syndicated
exclusivity rules. (47 U.S.C. 340(d)(2) and 340(e)(1))
Where a satellite operator offers local-into-local
service, it may retransmit the signals of significantly
viewed stations only to those subscribers who take
local-into-local service. (47 U.S.C. 340(b)(1) and (2))
An MVPD does not need to obtain consent to
retransmit the signal of a noncommercial television
broadcast station. (47 U.S.C. 325(b)(2)(A)) Depending
on the interpretation of 47 U.S.C. 339(a)(1)(A), a
satellite provider may or many not be allowed to
retransmit distant signals other than those listed
above by negotiating a license with the copyright
holders of the content on those distant signals.a
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Issue
Satellite Operators
Cable Operators
Distant Signals:
For the three categories of distant signals identified
A cable operator must pay a statutory
Copyright
above in the “Distant Signals: Distribution” cell in this
copyright license royalty fee for the
table, there is a statutory copyright license available
public performance of the copyrighted
to a satellite operator for the public performance of
works on all distant signals carried
the copyrighted works on the broadcast signals: there except those of significantly viewed
is a royalty-free license for the public performance of
stations. Royalty fees are based on a
the copyrighted works on the signals of significantly
percentage of the cable operator’s gross
viewed stations; for the signals of distant network
revenues. (17 U.S.C. 111(d))
stations and distant non-network stations there are
separate royalty fees calculated on a flat per
subscriber, per distant station carried basis; these
royalty fees also differ stations for analog and digital
signals. (17 U.S.C. 119(a)(1), (2), and (3)) A satellite
operator always may negotiate a copyright license
agreement, outside the statutory copyright license
available in section 119 of the Copyright Act, with the
copyright holders of the content on a distant
broadcast signal, but depending on the interpretation
of section 339(a)(1)(A) of the Communications Act,
the satellite operator may or may not be allowed to
retransmit that distant signal.a
Exceptions
Satellite operators are allowed to retransmit, to
A cable operator may elect to
subscribers located in certain counties or states (in
retransmit to subscribers in Umatilla,
Vermont, New Hampshire, Oregon, and Mississippi)
Grant, Malheur, and Wallowa counties
that are assigned to DMAs whose local broadcast
in Oregon the broadcast signals of any
stations are in another state, certain in-state but non-
television broadcast station in Oregon
local market signals; retransmission of these distant
that any cable operator was
signals is subject to obtaining the permission of the
retransmitting to subscribers in those
stations and making royalty payments under the
four counties on January 1, 2004. (47
compulsory copyright license for the secondary
U.S.C. 341)
transmission of distant broadcast signals, but not
subject to meeting the requirements of the network
non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules. (17
U.S.C. 119(a)(2)(C)(i)-(iv) and 47 U.S.C. 341) The
geographic areas in Alaska that are not in any Nielsen
DMA are assigned by satellite carriers to one of the
DMAs in that state in order to allow the carriers to
offer subscribers in those areas the local-into-local
service for the DMA to which they are assigned. (17
U.S.C. 19(a)(16)) Satellite carriers with more than
5,000,000 subscribers who offer service in
Alaska/Hawaii must retransmit to subscribers in those
states all of the analog broadcast signals originating in
Alaska/ Hawaii; these signals must be made available
to substantially all of the subscribers in their DMAs
and the signals from at least one of the local markets
in the state must be made available to substantially all
of the subscribers in the state not located in a DMA;
the cost to subscribers of such transmissions shal not
exceed the cost of retransmission of local television
stations in other states. (47 U.S.C. 338(a)(4))
Source: Statutory and regulatory citations are provided within the table.
a. The possible interpretations of section 339(a)(1)(A) of the Communications Act, and the implications of
those interpretations, are presented in the next section of this report.
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Providing the Signals of Non-Local but In-State
Stations to Orphan Counties

The Overall Issue
Under current statutes and rules, 43 states have one or more counties that are assigned to local
markets for which the principal city (from which all or most of the local television signals
originate) is outside their state. Satellite (and, in many situations, cable) subscribers in these
“orphan counties” may not be receiving signals from in-state broadcast stations and may not be
receiving news, sports, and public affairs programming of interest in their state, though (as will be
discussed below) in some cases they are receiving such programming. Many households and local
and state elected officials in counties that currently are not being well served have contacted their
Members of Congress to request that satellite operators be allowed (and cable operators, who
currently are allowed, be encouraged) to retransmit to subscribers in the counties the signals of
broadcast stations in in-state, but non-local, markets.
Proponents of the retransmission of non-local but in-state broadcast signals to MVPD subscribers
located in orphan counties cite the following programming benefits:
Sports programming—Many subscribers have a strong allegiance to the sports
teams of their home state universities, whose games are more likely to be
broadcast by in-state broadcast stations than by stations located in another state.
Similarly, many subscribers have a strong allegiance to professional sports teams
located in the state, whose games are more likely to be broadcast by in-state
broadcast stations than by stations located in another state.46 Stations located in
bordering states are especially unlikely to broadcast these sporting events of
interest to the subscribers in orphan counties if the state universities in those
bordering states belong to different sports conferences or if those bordering states
have their own professional sports teams. There is ample market evidence, in the
form of cable sports networks being able to command by far the highest per
subscriber fees, that many MVPD subscribers highly value sports programming
and therefore allowing MVPDs to offer non-local but in-state sports
programming would increase the well-being of those subscribers.
Weather and related public safety programming—There tend to be prevailing
weather patterns in terms of the general direction that storms, tornadoes, and
other inclement weather take, for example from west to east or from south to
north. Public safety is fostered if MVPD subscribers are able to receive the
broadcast signals of stations that experience and report on the same weather
patterns the subscribers experience. Subscribers located in orphan counties that
do not experience the same weather patterns as the principal city in which their
local stations are located would benefit from receiving weather information
provided by non-local but in-state stations that do experience and report on the

46 Some professional sports leagues divide the country into geographic zones for which particular teams are given the
rights to be the exclusive team to have their games broadcast. In these situations, broadcasters located in neighboring
states might be contractually prohibited from broadcasting the games of a team located in a neighboring state.
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same weather patterns. Typically, however, orphan counties are located closer to
the principal city of their own DMA than to the principal city of any in-state
DMA and therefore the weather programming of their local broadcast stations
generally is more relevant to orphan county households.
State news programming—Typically, broadcast television stations provide
more local news than state news. Frequently, however, orphan counties are
located quite far away from both the local stations in their DMAs and from the
closest non-local, but in-state stations. As a result, neither the local nor the in-
state stations are likely to provide much coverage of local news in those orphan
counties. Television stations, however, typically do provide some news coverage
of state-wide elections and other state-wide issues. Proponents of the
retransmission of in-state broadcast signals to orphan counties claim that the
public interest, as well as the private interest of subscribers, would benefit from
the retransmission of such state news programming to households in orphan
counties.
State and local political advertising—Candidates for elective office at both the
state and local level often try to communicate with voters through broadcast
television advertising. To the extent that candidates, to reach households located
in orphan counties, must purchase advertising time on television stations
originating in other states and that primarily reach viewers who live in those
other states, the efficiency of political advertising is reduced and the cost
increased. If MVPDs could retransmit to subscribers located in orphan counties
the signals of in-state broadcast stations, political candidates might be able to
save in advertising purchases made to out-of-state stations and still reach
households located in those counties.
Broadcasters respond that the potential public interest gains from allowing the retransmission of
distant in-state programming would be outweighed by decreases in the quality and quantity of
local programming local stations could offer because they would be financially harmed by the
importation of the distant signals, unless perhaps the retransmitted programming was limited to
locally-produced news programming.47 Broadcast network affiliates claim that, in addition to
broadcast advertising revenues falling, MVPDs could play hardball in their retransmission
negotiations with the local stations, fail to reach a retransmission consent agreement, and then
simply carry the signals of a distant in-state network affiliate at a lower price. With lower (or
totally lost) retransmission consent revenues, broadcasters argue, they would have to cut back on
local news programming, which is expensive to produce.
The actual impact—both on public policy objectives such as localism and on local broadcast
station revenues—of allowing MVPDs to retransmit in-state signals to their subscribers in orphan
counties is likely to be sensitive to the specific new retransmission and copyright rules that are

47 See, for example, the written statement of David K. Rehr, president and CEO, the National Association of
Broadcasters, submitted to the United States House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary, “Hearing on
Copyright Licensing in a Digital Age: Competition, Compensation and the Need to Update the Cable and Satellite TV
Licenses,” February 25, 2009, and the written statement of Paul A Karpowicz, president, Meredith Broadcasting
Group, on behalf of the Television Board of the National Association of Broadcasters, before the Subcommittee on
Communications, Technology, and the Internet, House Committee on Energy and Commerce, “Hearing on Discussion
Draft of Legislation to Reauthorize the Satellite Home Viewer Act,” June 16, 2009.
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adopted. Moreover, whatever those rules may be, the actual impact is likely to vary significantly
from market to market.
There is no single model orphan county. Allowing MVPDs to retransmit distant in-state signals to
a sparsely populated rural county that is geographically distant from both its local broadcast
stations and from the distant in-state stations (for example, to Montezuma and La Plata counties
in southwestern Colorado, which are assigned to the Albuquerque, NM DMA) will likely have a
different market impact than allowing MVPDs to retransmit distant in-state signals to a highly
urbanized county that is geographically close to its local stations, but across the state line (for
example, to Dona Ana county in southern New Mexico, which includes the city of Las Cruces
and is just across the state line from, but assigned to the DMA of, El Paso, TX). It is unlikely that
the Albuquerque broadcast stations, which have 677,740 television households in their DMA,
provide much programming (or advertising) that addresses the local needs and interests of the
27,540 television households in Montezuma and La Plata counties.48 It also is unlikely that the
distant in-state stations in Denver would provide programming or advertising that addresses the
local needs and interests (including weather information) of households in Montezuma and La
Plata counties, though those stations are likely to provide some Colorado sports, news, and
political programming of state-wide interest. In contrast, the El Paso broadcast stations, which
have 302,470 television households in their DMA, may well provide programming and
advertising that addresses the local needs and interests of the 68,330 television households in
Dona Ana county. The in-state stations in Albuquerque are unlikely to provide local programming
(including weather reports or local advertising) of interest to the households in Dona Ana county,
but they are likely to provide some New Mexico sports, news, and political programming of state-
wide interest.
The Appendix to this report provides detailed information on orphan counties, listing, for each
state, the number of television households in the state, the DMAs in the state for which the
primary city is outside the state, each orphan county in those DMAs, the number of television
households in each orphan county, the percentage of television households in the state that are
located in orphan counties, and the full power commercial public/educational television stations
located in the orphan counties (despite the principal city of the DMA being located in another
state). Figure 1 is a map of the continental United States that shows all of the orphan counties.
(There are no orphan counties in Alaska or Hawaii, although some portions of Alaska are outside
any DMA.) The detailed data and map, in conjunction, help illustrate on one hand how ubiquitous
orphan counties are and on the other hand how heterogeneous orphan counties are, with television
households in some counties (but not in others) having reasonable access to programming of local
and state-wide interest.

48 Statistics in this paragraph are from Nielsen DMA Market Atlas, Nielsen Media Research, 2008, reproduced in
Warren Communications, Television and Cable Factbook 2009, Stations Volume 2.
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Figure 1. Counties Assigned to Designated Market Areas for Which the Primary City
Is Outside the State (“Orphan Counties”), 2009

Sources: Prepared by CRS based on Designated Market Areas defined by Nielsen Media Research, as reported
in Television & Cable Factbook 2009, Warren Communications; Census TIGER/Line boundaries, 2008.
Consider, for example, the Washington, DC DMA. By definition, all the counties in the DMA
other than Washington, DC itself are orphan counties, since the principal city is outside their state
borders. But the access of television households in those counties to programs of state and local
interest varies significantly. The Washington, DC television stations tend to offer news, weather,
and sports programming of both local and state-wide interest to households in close-in suburban
Maryland and Virginia counties, such as Fairfax and Arlington counties in Virginia and
Montgomery and Prince George’s counties in Maryland. In addition, WFDC is a Univision
affiliate located in Arlington County and WPXW is an Ion affiliate located in close-in Manassas,
VA. But the Washington, DC DMA also includes counties far more distant from Washington,
DC—such as Fulton County, PA, seven counties in West Virginia (Grant, Mineral, Hardy,
Hampshire, Morgan, Berkeley, and Jefferson), Allegheny and Washington counties in Maryland,
and Shenandoah and Page counties in Virginia—for which the Washington, DC stations do not
provide programming of local interest (nor, in the case of the West Virginia and Pennsylvania
counties, programming of state-wide interest). But these distant counties may be served by
smaller broadcast stations located in the periphery of the Washington, DC DMA. For example,
WHAG-TV is an NBC-affiliated station located in Hagerstown, MD, and WJAL is an
independent station located in Hagerstown, and these stations may provide programming of local
interest to counties in Maryland, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania that are located in the
northwestern portion of the Washington, DC DMA. In addition, some out-of-market stations have
been designated as significantly viewed in these distant counties and satellite and cable operators
may retransmit them to households in those counties. For example, WJAC, an NBC affiliate in
Johnstown, PA, and WTAJ, a CBS affiliate in Altoona, PA, have been designated significantly
viewed stations in Fulton County, PA; WHSV, an ABC affiliate in Harrisonburg, VA, and WTVR,
a CBS affiliate in Richmond, VA, have been designated significantly viewed stations in Page
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County, VA.49 At the same time, the most current FCC list of significantly viewed counties does
not include any significantly viewed stations located in West Virginia for the seven West Virginia
counties in the Washington, DC DMA.50
It is difficult to project what the impact on the retransmission consent revenues of local
broadcasters would be from the importation of in-state signals into orphan counties, or if that
impact would be greater in rural or urban orphan counties. There are potentially conflicting
market forces at work. For example, on one hand, since the populations of Montezuma and La
Plata counties are small, and the local programming of the Albuquerque stations is not likely to be
responsive to the needs or interests of, or highly demanded by, the residents of those counties, it is
unlikely that the retransmission consent revenues that Albuquerque stations receive from MVPDs
serving Montezuma and La Plata counties represent a significant portion of those stations’
revenue streams. In contrast, because the local programming of the El Paso stations is likely to be
responsive to the needs and interests of the residents of Dona Ana county, which has a substantial
population, it is possible that the retransmission consent revenues that El Paso stations receive
from MVPDs serving Don Ana county do represent a significant portion of those stations’
revenue streams. On the other hand, given that small cable companies serving rural communities
(such as those serving Montezuma and La Plata counties) tend to be in less favorable
retransmission consent negotiating positions than larger cable companies serving more populous
areas (such as Comcast, which serves Las Cruces, the major city in Dona Ana county), on a per
subscriber basis more retransmission consent revenues may be generated in more rural counties.
Currently, cable operators may retransmit to their subscribers in orphan counties the signals of
any non-local station located in the state, subject to meeting the FCC’s network non-duplication,
syndicated exclusivity, and sports blackout rules, obtaining the permission of those distant
stations, and paying a copyright royalty fee. In many cases, the in-state stations are prohibited
from granting retransmission consent by provisions in their network-affiliate contracts—though
data are not available to shed light on how common such contractual prohibitions are or how
often (if at all) cable companies have sought such retransmission consent. In his written testimony
submitted for the June 16, 2009 House hearing, Preston Padden of the Walt Disney Company
identified several cable operators that have negotiated copyright agreements to import the local
news programming of broadcast stations located in another market.51 But this does not appear to
be common, suggesting that retransmitting only a broadcast station’s locally-produced news
programming may not be a particularly attractive option for cable operators.
Currently, satellite operators explicitly have the authority to retransmit the in-state signals of
stations that the FCC has determined are “significantly viewed” and of stations affiliated with
networks for which subscribers in the orphan county cannot receive the over-the-air signal of a
local network-affiliated station; they must pay a copyright fee for retransmitting the signals of

49 The FCC’s current list of significantly viewed stations, based on FCC actions through February 19, 2009, is available
at http://www.fcc.gov/mb/significantlyviewedstations022509.pdf. The listing is an update of the initial list adopted on
November 2, 2005, In the Matter of Implementation of the Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act of
2004; Implementation of Section 340 of the Communications Act
, Federal Communications Commission, MB Docket
No. 05-49, Report and Order, Appendix C, “Significantly Viewed List,” released November 3, 2005.
50 Ibid.
51 Written Testimony of Preston R. Padden, executive vice president, worldwide government relations, the Walt Disney
Company, before the Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet, House Committee on Energy
and Commerce, “Hearing on Discussion Draft of Legislation to Reauthorize the Satellite Home Viewer Act,” June 16,
2009, at p. 6.
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network-affiliated stations, but not significantly viewed stations. As will be discussed later in this
report, it may be open to interpretation whether the language in section 339(a)(1) of the
Communications Act relating to which distant signals a satellite carrier may carry allows a
satellite operator to retransmit to orphan counties the programming (including local news
programming) of any other in-state but non-local broadcast stations. If they are allowed to do so,
they would not be allowed to use the statutory copyright license provided in section 119 of the
Copyright Act, but rather would have to negotiate a copyright agreement with all of the relevant
program copyright holders. It does not appear that any satellite operator currently is
retransmitting programming to subscribers in orphan counties through a negotiated copyright
agreement.
Regulatory Parameters Available to Address Orphan Counties
If Congress decides to foster MVPD retransmission of programming of state-wide interest to
subscribers in orphan counties, it would have a number of regulatory parameters available in
considering modification of current retransmission and copyright rules. These include:
which in-state stations’ signals the MVPDs may retransmit: The more non-
local, but in-state stations that an MVPD may negotiate with to retransmit their
signals to subscribers in orphan counties, the greater the potential availability of
programming of state-wide interest to those subscribers (though many of these
stations might not be airing programming of local interest in the orphan
counties). At the same time, the greater the number of potential broadcast signals
available to the MVPD, the greater the opportunity for the MVPD to take a hard
line when negotiating retransmission consent with local broadcasters. The
broadest option would allow MVPDs to retransmit to their subscribers in orphan
counties the signals of any station located in the state;52 this would maximize
both the potential availability of programming of state-wide interest and the
potential negative impact on local broadcasters. A second option would allow
MVPDs to retransmit to their subscribers in orphan counties the signals of any
station located in the state capital.53 This option appears to implicitly assume that
the broadcast stations in state capitals are most likely to carry news and public
affairs programming of state-wide interest. Critics have indicated that state
capitals may be located very far from orphan counties, and thus be unlikely to
provide programming of local interest, such as weather forecasts, to households
in the counties. They have proposed that if the retransmission of non-local in-
state signals is allowed at all, it should be limited to the signals of stations that
are in markets adjacent to the orphan counties. H.R. 3216 would limit
retransmission to the signals of stations in markets adjacent to (or, if there were
no such markets, the market closest to) orphan counties; a broadcast station’s
signals could be retransmitted within an adjacent DMA, but (1) only if that
adjacent DMA covers more than one state, (2) only to counties in the DMA that

52 For example, H.R. 505, introduced by Representative Boren, would allow satellite operators to retransmit to any
subscriber in the state of Oklahoma the signals of any broadcast station located in the state.
53 In effect, S. 771 and H.R. 1860 would do this by classifying any station in the DMA of a state capital is significantly
viewed for purposes of carriage and retransmission.
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are within the same state as the broadcast station, and (3) only if those counties
have no home-state affiliate of the same network.54
whether to limit the programming on those stations that can be
retransmitted by applying the FCC’s network non-duplication, syndicated
exclusivity, and sports blackout rules to such retransmission
: Whichever in-
state stations’ signals may be retransmitted, MVPDs will find it less attractive to
retransmit these signals if such retransmission is subject to the FCC’s network
non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity rules, which allow the local station to
require the MVPD to black out all network and syndicated programming on the
retransmitted signal even if the local station was not being carried by the
MVPD.55 Although these rules only apply within a 35- to 55-mile radius of the
broadcast station, and many orphan counties are farther away from the local
broadcast stations than that, many counties, or parts thereof, do lie within those
mileage limits.
whether there should be any modifications to the retransmission consent
requirements in Section 325 of the Communications Act to explicitly address
the retransmission of signals into orphan counties
: Since most broadcasters
oppose the retransmission of distant signals into their markets, they may not be
willing to grant MVPDs permission to retransmit their signals to other markets.
Under current rules, MVPD retransmission of non-local signals is usually, but not
always, subject to obtaining the retransmission consent of the broadcast station.
Thus, even if an MVPD wants to retransmit a non-local, in-state signal to its
subscribers in an orphan county it may not be able to do so. One of the provisions
in the Four Corners Television Access Act of 2009 would exempt MVPDs from
the requirement to obtain retransmission consent from in-state broadcasters in
order to retransmit their signals to the two orphan counties. By contrast, under
H.R. 3216, MVPDs would be required to obtain retransmission consent from in-
state broadcast stations in order to retransmit their signals to orphan counties.56
At the same time, under H.R. 3216 a local broadcast station could not attempt to
block MVPDs from retransmitting non-local, in-state station signals into orphan
counties by conditioning MVPD retransmission of its own signal on the MVPD
not retransmitting non-local, in-state signals.

54 Under H.R. 3216, an “adjacent market” would be defined as any local market adjacent to, and partially but not
entirely in the same state as, the local market in which a station’s community of license is located; an “adjacent
underserved county” would be defined as a county within the station’s adjacent market that is both (a) located in the
same state as the station’s community of license, and (b) not within the local market of any other station that is both
affiliated with the same network and located in the same state as such other station’s community of license. In addition,
a county that is in a local market containing no in-state network stations, but which is not located in the adjacent market
of any in-state network station, would be considered to be in the adjacent market of the nearest local market located in
whole or in part within the state in which the county is located.
55 H.R. 3216 explicitly would not make the retransmission of in-state signals into adjacent underserved counties subject
to the FCC’s network non-duplication and syndicated exclusivity requirements. It is worth noting that, with respect to
the four state-specific exceptions in SHVERA, which allowed satellite providers to retransmit to their subscribers the
signals of certain non-local, in-state broadcast stations in New Hampshire, Vermont, Mississippi, and Oregon, the
statute does not explicitly require the satellite operators to abide by the FCC’s network non-duplication and syndicated
exclusivity rules and the FCC, using its discretion, chose not to apply those rules.
56 As discussed below, the retransmission consent requirement in H.R. 3216 would not apply if the station is prohibited,
under provisions of its network-affiliate contract, from granting retransmission consent to MVPDs to retransmit their
signals beyond their local markets.
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whether existing provisions in network-affiliate contracts that prohibit
affiliates from granting retransmission rights to their signals outside their
local markets should be pre-empted to ensure that in-state programming is
available to subscribers in orphan counties
: Although systematic data are not
available, it appears that many current network-affiliate contracts include
provisions that prohibit the affiliates from granting MVPDs permission to
retransmit their signals beyond the local market. These contractual provisions
could render ineffective rules allowing MVPDs to retransmit in-state signals, if
such retransmission were contingent on obtaining the retransmission consent of
the broadcast station, as for example would be required under the adjacent
underserved county proposal. If it is the intention of Congress to maximize the
likelihood that residents of orphan counties who subscribe to MVPD service
receive non-local, in-state broadcast signals, it may be necessary to pre-empt the
restrictive provisions in the network-affiliate contracts. Such action would,
however, represent intrusive government intervention into the contractual
relationship between private parties. One possible approach would be to exempt
MVPDs that want to retransmit in-state signals to their orphan county subscribers
from the requirement that they obtain the retransmission consent of the
broadcaster. This might or might not be effective, depending on the exact
wording of the relevant provisions in the network-affiliate contracts. If the
provisions only prohibit stations from granting retransmission consent, but do not
restrict the stations from allowing the signals to be retransmitted, then it might be
sufficient to add a provision to section 325(b)(2)(C) of the Communications Act,
which lists the exceptions to the retransmission consent requirements. If the
provisions include broader restrictions, then it might be necessary to prohibit
certain contractual relationships. There is not sufficient publicly available
information on those contractual provisions to be certain what statutory language
would be needed to pre-empt current restrictive provisions.
whether MVPDs should be required to retransmit the signals of all local
broadcast stations in an orphan county as a precondition for the right to
retransmit non-local, in-state signals to subscribers in the orphan county
:
One way to constrain the negotiating leverage that an MVPD could gain if it
were allowed to retransmit the signals of non-local, in-state stations to its orphan
county subscribers might be to condition such retransmission on the MVPD
reaching retransmission consent with, and carrying the signals of, all the local
stations in the county. H.R. 3216 includes this condition.
what the copyright treatment should be for the retransmission of distant in-
state signals to subscribers in orphan counties: The greater the copyright
license fee that an MVPD must pay to retransmit non-local, in-state signals to
orphan county subscribers, the less the incentive for the MVPD to retransmit
those signals. Currently, satellite and cable providers must pay royalty fees for
the retransmission of superstation and distant network signals, but no fee for the
retransmission of the signals of significantly viewed stations. H.R. 3216 would
allow both satellite and cable operators to retransmit non-local, in-state signals to
orphan county subscribers on a royalty-free basis. The Four Corners Television
Access Act of 2009 would deem each television broadcast station broadcasting in
the DMA of a state capital as a “significantly viewed” station. Because under
current rules the signals of significantly viewed stations can be retransmitted on a
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royalty free basis, MVPDs would be allowed to retransmit the Denver stations to
the two orphan counties in Colorado without making copyright payments.
whether it should be permissive or mandatory for MVPDs serving orphan
counties to retransmit the signals of non-local, in-state stations to
subscribers in those counties
: Even if in-state broadcast stations gave their
permission for an MVPD to retransmit their signals to subscribers in orphan
counties, the MVPD might not have the incentive to retransmit those signals if it
did not perceive sufficient demand to justify using some of its (satellite or cable)
capacity to carry those signals. On one hand, if an in-state broadcast station is
carrying popular sports programming that the MVPD’s subscribers are likely to
demand—such as the games of an in-state university or in-state professional
team—the MVPD is very likely to want to retransmit that station’s signals
because carrying the sports programming might be a significant marketing tool.
(Indeed, in a market with more than one MVPD provider, if one provider in the
market is able to retransmit popular sports programming that some significant
portion of households in the market view as “must have” programming, then
other MVPDs will be at a competitive disadvantage in that market if they cannot
retransmit that sports programming. For that reason, the cable and satellite
industries each has been concerned that it have the same right to retransmit
distant broadcast stations to subscribers in orphan counties as the other has.) On
the other hand, if an in-state broadcast station is not carrying popular sports
programming, but does offer news and public affairs programming of state-wide
interest, though not of local interest to households in an orphan county, then the
demand in the orphan county for that programming might not be that substantial.
In that case, an MVPD serving that orphan county might not want to use some of
its scarce system capacity to retransmit the station’s signals. If ensuring that all
households in a state have access to state-wide news and public affairs
programming from a variety of sources is viewed as an important public policy
goal, then one might consider requiring MVPDs to retransmit to their subscribers
in orphan counties the signals of non-local, in-state stations. But such a
requirement might not be consistent with the viewing preferences of the
households in the orphan counties or in the business interest of either the
broadcasters or the MVPDs.
Current Obstacles to Serving Orphan Counties
During the June 16, 2009 House hearing and in the general public policy debate, there has been
discussion about which distant signals satellite operators currently have the legal authority to
retransmit to subscribers in orphan counties, how they could obtain a license for the public
performance of the copyrighted works on the retransmitted signals, and under what conditions it
would be financially feasible to retransmit those signals. In particular, what current legal and
market limitations exist on the ability of a satellite operator to import in-state, non-local news and
public affairs programming and in-state, non-local sports programming into an orphan county?
Section 339(a)(1)(A) of the Communications Act, which addresses the distant broadcast signals
that a satellite operator is permitted to carry, states “Subject to section 119 of title 17, United
States Code, any satellite carrier shall be permitted to provide the signals of no more than two
network stations in a single day for each television network to any household not located within
the local markets of those network stations.” The basic legal question, for which there does not
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appear to have been any definitive ruling by an administrative agency or court, is: Since section
339(a)(1)(A) is entitled “Carriage permitted,” does the phrase “Subject to section 119” limit the
scope of a satellite operator’s right to carry distant signals to only those signals for which a
satellite operator can obtain a statutory copyright license for secondary transmission under section
119?57 Or does a satellite operator always have the right to carry the signals of any and all
programming on distant broadcast signals for which it succeeds in negotiating a copyright
agreement with the copyright holders, with the reference to section 119 only intended to reinforce
that if a satellite operator chooses to use the statutory copyright license it must abide by all the
terms and conditions of that license in order to be able to carry a distant network signal?
Beyond this legal question of statutory interpretation, there are questions about how a satellite
operator would be able to negotiate a license with the copyright holders and the extent to which a
satellite operator is likely to have a market incentive to do so. In this regard, it is useful to address
separately news programming of state-wide interest and sports programming of state-wide
interest, since both the supply characteristics and the demand characteristics are different for
these two programming categories.
News Programming of State-Wide Interest
The discussion at the June 16, 2009 House hearing focused on the retransmission to subscribers in
an orphan county of locally-produced news programming of an in-state station located in a
different DMA. The witnesses representing the broadcasting and programming industries stated
that many broadcasters have offered to make their locally-produced news programming—but not
their network programming—available to satellite operators who seek to serve orphan counties
and that a satellite operator could negotiate a copyright license and retransmission consent
agreement with an in-state station for the rights to carry that station’s local news programming.
These witnesses indicated that although locally-produced news programs are likely to include
clips from the national network, for which the network holds the copyright, when the clip is
included in a locally-produced news program the major networks generally give the affiliate the
right to negotiate a copyright agreement with an MVPD that includes those clips, so a satellite
operator would not have to negotiate separately with the network. The satellite operators
responded that they still would have to negotiate with whomever held the copyright for the
advertising segments of the locally-produced news program. The broadcasters argue that
advertisers are unlikely to place any barriers before the wider distribution of their advertising
messages and thus copyright negotiations with them should be simple. While this probably is
true, in some cases the copyright holder might be a musician, not the advertiser, though there is a
well-defined process involving BMI and ASCAP for obtaining a music copyright license.
More significantly, satellite operators claim that it would rarely be economically feasible for them
to retransmit only the two hours per day of an in-state broadcaster’s locally-produced news
programming. They say that this would require them to allocate a channel for only two hours of
programming per day. They claim they could not readily fill the remaining 22 hours with other
programming because they uplink and downlink locally-produced broadcast programming using
spot beams whose footprints cover narrow geographic areas, and uplink and downlink national or
regional programming networks using broad beams whose footprints cover the entire United

57 There may be yet one other question. Section 339 addresses the “carriage of distant television stations by satellite
operators.” Does “carriage” in any way connote something different from “retransmission” or “secondary transmission”
of distant signals?
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States or large regions within the United States. (More generally, the satellite operators have
claimed that, even if a non-local, but in-state broadcaster made available to them for
retransmission to their orphan county subscribers its network programming as well as its locally-
produced programming, they would be able to retransmit the programming only if both the
broadcast station and the orphan county were located within the footprint of the same spot beam.)
The satellite operators have the incentive to fill the capacity of their spot beams (as well as broad
beams) with the programming (or other service) that would generate the most revenues. Unless a
satellite operator has unused capacity on a spot beam—and to the extent possible it will try not to
construct excess capacity—it is unlikely to allocate a channel of that capacity to two hours of
programming per day. This is especially true if that programming includes some coverage of
news stories of state-wide interest, but a larger amount of programming that is of limited interest
to subscribers in the orphan county because it focuses on news of local interest in the community
of the (distant) station. (The satellite operators also have argued that they would not want to have
a channel that is dark 22 hours per day because subscribers do not like to have to “click” past
dark channels, but given the number of channels that satellite operators assign to pay-per-view
service that appears as dark channels to most subscribers, this is not a convincing argument.) All
this suggests that under current rules, if satellite operators are allowed to negotiate for the
retransmission to subscribers in orphan counties of only the signals of the locally-produced news
programming of non-local, in-state broadcast stations, they are unlikely to have an incentive to do
so.
Sports Programming of State-Wide Interest
Satellite operators are likely to have a stronger incentive to retransmit to orphan counties the
sports programming of state-wide interest of non-local, in-state broadcasters. Demand for such
programming may be substantial. Some households view certain sports programming as “must
have” programming that, if available from one MVPD but not a competitor, would lead the
household to subscribe to the MVPD that offered the programming. More basically, if sports
programming for which some households have a strong intensity of demand becomes available
from a satellite provider and is not available over-the-air, some of those households might be
motivated to subscribe to the satellite service in order to obtain the programming. Thus, in some
orphan counties a satellite operator might have the incentive to negotiate a copyright agreement
just for the sports programming, even if the remainder of that channel’s schedule remained dark,
while in other orphan counties the satellite operator might not have the incentive to do so.
But it may not be possible for a satellite operator to negotiate such a copyright agreement. If the
sports programming covers the games of an in-state (or the most closely located out-of-state)
team in a professional sports league, such as the National Football League (NFL), then almost
certainly the league has retained its copyright over the programming and any negotiations would
have to be between the satellite operator and the league (or perhaps the local team). Some
professional leagues have set very strict geographical boundaries for where each team’s games
can be transmitted or retransmitted—and have chosen not to make exceptions to those
boundaries—in order to assure any broadcast station affiliated with the network that has obtained
the broadcast transmission rights remains the exclusive broadcaster of that league’s games during
that particular time of day and to maximize league revenues by protecting against the
cannibalization of revenues from other programming packages. For example, the NFL seeks to
maximize revenues by selling broadcast and cable networks the rights to certain local and
regional games, but also by separately marketing to DirecTV an exclusive NFL Sunday Ticket
package that offers live coverage of up to 14 NFL games each Sunday for avid football fans.
Congressional Research Service
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Reauthorizing the Satellite Home Viewing Provisions

Allowing satellite or cable subscribers in certain areas to receive the local or regional games
transmitted by two different broadcast stations might reduce demand for NFL Sunday Ticket.
Television households in orphan counties also often seek sports programming that covers the
games of the football, basketball, or baseball teams of their state university. Their local broadcast
stations, broadcasting from a neighboring state, are likely to be transmitting the games of that
neighboring state’s university. Broadcasters claim that, under current rules, it is possible for non-
local, in-state broadcasters to obtain a copyright license for the home state university games that
extends to the orphan counties and then to negotiate retransmission consent and a copyright
license with the satellite and cable operators to allow them to retransmit the home university
games to their subscribers in the orphan counties.
As an example, Preston Padden of the Disney Company attached to his written testimony for the
June 16, 2009 House hearing a letter from KATV, the ABC affiliate in Little Rock, to DirecTV,
offering “to negotiate retransmission terms for KATV-produced news, sports, and public affairs
programming” to DirecTV subscribers located in orphan counties in Arkansas.58 Although the
letter is not explicit about KATV’s sports programming, in the policy debate broadcasters have
inferred that it includes the University of Arkansas football and basketball games, for which
KATV has negotiated a copyright license and which as a result legally should be treated as if it
were KATV’s locally-produced programming. It would appear that KATV could seek to negotiate
a retransmission agreement with DirecTV or any other MVPD, but there could be one legal risk.
As explained earlier, there has not been a legal ruling on the proper way to interpret section
339(a)(1)(A) of the Communications Act. If it were interpreted to limit the scope of a satellite
operator’s right to retransmit distant signals to only those signals for which a satellite operator can
obtain a statutory copyright license for secondary transmission under section 119, then a
broadcaster operating in the DMA to which the orphan counties are assigned (for example, the
local broadcaster in the Shreveport, Louisiana DMA that is carrying in orphan Arkansas counties
the Louisiana State games that probably are aired at the same time as the Arkansas games) could
challenge the retransmission of KATV’s signals through a complaint before the FCC, claiming
such retransmission is not allowed under the Communications Act and that it has been harmed to
the extent its audience has migrated to the Arkansas games. Since the University of Arkansas and
Louisiana State are in the same collegiate athletic conference, it might be possible that the
conference, which may have been the original copyright holder that had negotiated with KATV,
would be willing to help broker a compromise among the parties that would allow the University
of Arkansas games to be retransmitted to the orphan counties in Arkansas.
But sometimes state boundaries also represent boundaries between collegiate athletic
conferences. For example, the University of Arkansas and the University of Missouri are in
different athletic conferences. In this case, the local television station in the Springfield, Missouri
DMA that broadcasts the University of Missouri games might object to the retransmission of
University of Arkansas games to satellite subscribers in the orphan Arkansas counties located in
its local market, and there would not be a collegiate athletic conference to act as an intermediary.
If there is any likelihood that a local station could file a suit in court or a complaint at the FCC

58 Letter from L. Dale Nicholson, president and general manager, KATV, to Derek Chang, executive vice president for
content strategy and development, DirecTV, Inc., dated March 25, 2009, attached to the written Testimony of Preston
R. Padden, executive vice president, worldwide government relations, the Walt Disney Company, before the
Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet, House Committee on Energy and Commerce,
“Hearing on Discussion Draft of Legislation to Reauthorize the Satellite Home Viewer Act,” June 16, 2009.

Congressional Research Service
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Reauthorizing the Satellite Home Viewing Provisions

that gets traction, it could create a legal risk that might discourage a satellite operator from
negotiating to carry the non-local, in-state signals.
Requiring Satellite Operators to Offer Local-into-
Local Service in All Markets

Currently, satellite operators are allowed, but not required, to offer subscribers the signals of all
the broadcast stations in their local market. If a satellite operator chooses to retransmit the signal
of a local broadcast station, it must retransmit the primary signals of all the stations in that local
market, subject to obtaining local station permission. The satellite operators have chosen not to
offer this “local-into-local” service in many small markets, preferring to use their satellite
capacity to provide additional high definition and other programming to larger, more lucrative
markets than to use the capacity to serve very small numbers of customers. In some cases, those
small markets may not generate enough revenues to cover the costs of providing local-into-local
service.59 As a result approximately 3% of all U.S. households do not have access to local
broadcast signals if they subscribe to satellite video service.60 Representative Stupak has
introduced H.R. 927, which would require satellite operators to offer local-into-local service in all
markets.
The broadcasters support mandatory local-into-local service, arguing that in markets where
satellite operators are not offering such service satellite subscribers are unlikely to be able to
receive local news, weather, and sports programming since those subscribers probably no longer
maintain roof-top antennas to receive broadcast signals. The broadcasters claim this undermines
the “principles of localism and universal service for all Americans.”61 It is in the interest of
broadcasters to have their signals carried by as many MVPDs as possible; moreover, making such
carriage mandatory may help broadcasters in their retransmission consent negotiations with
MVPDs.
The satellite operators oppose a statutory requirement that they offer local-into-local service in all
markets.62 They claim that, in just ten years, they have built out their networks to provide local

59 Paul Gallant, an analyst with Stanford Washington Research Group, reportedly stated that mandatory provision of
local-into-local service in all markets “would impose significant new costs on Dish Network and DirecTV and generate
virtually no new revenue” because the markets in question are so small. See Todd Shields, “DirecTV, Dish May Face
Requirement for More Local TV (Update1),” Bloomberg.com, February 23, 2009, available at http://www.bloomberg.
com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=ayQ_vo3nJImo, viewed on April 27, 2009.
60 According to the written testimony of Charles W. Ergen, chairman, president, and chief executive officer of DISH
Network Corporation, submitted for the hearing on “Reauthorization of the Satellite Home Viewer Extension and
Reauthorization Act,” before the Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet, Committee on
Energy and Commerce, U.S. House of Representatives, February 24, 2009, at p. 2, “DISH provides local service in 178
markets today, reaching 97 percent of households nationwide.” According to the written testimony of Bob Gabrielli,
senior vice president, broadcasting operations and distribution, DIRECTV, Inc., before the House Judiciary Committee,
February 25, 2009, at p. 10, “DIRECTV today offers local television stations by satellite in 150 of the 210 local
markets in the United States, serving 95 percent of American households. (Along with DISH Network, we offer local
service to 98 percent of American households.)”
61 Written statement of Paul A Karpowicz, president, Meredith Broadcasting Group, on behalf of the Television Board
of the National Association of Broadcasters, before the Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the
Internet, House Committee on Energy and Commerce, “Hearing on Discussion Draft of Legislation to Reauthorize the
Satellite Home Viewer Act,” June 16, 2009, at p. 7.
62 See, for example, the written testimony of Derek Chang, executive vice president, content strategy and development,
(continued...)
Congressional Research Service
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Reauthorizing the Satellite Home Viewing Provisions

programming to 98% of U.S. households, while cable and broadcast, despite being in business
much longer, actually offer local service to a smaller percentage of U.S. households. They
therefore suggest that, if local-into-local service is made mandatory, the requirement be
constrained as follows:
• It should be subject to a one-third capacity cap, analogous to the constraint on the
must carry rules for cable, which require a cable operator to carry local
commercial stations only up to one-third of the aggregate number of usable
activated channels in the operator’s system;
• It should be limited to the carriage of the signals of those stations that provide
their viewers with a minimum of 20% locally-produced programming;
• Local broadcasters should share in the costs of providing local service in the
smallest markets by providing a good quality signal at one of the satellite
operator’s centralized uplink centers rather than at the local collection facility in
the broadcaster’s market, thereby imposing some of the backhaul costs on the
local broadcaster; and
• Local broadcasters should not charge satellite operators retransmission consent
fees for retransmitting their signals to subscribers in the smallest markets.
It may not be simple to measure capacity usage in satellite networks, since local
broadcast signals are retransmitted over spot beams while national and regional networks
are retransmitted over broad beams. But some formula presumably could be constructed.
Historically, despite the longstanding U.S. media policy goal of fostering localism, the
FCC has avoided setting specific requirements on the amount or proportion of broadcast
programming that must be locally-produced. Broadcasters strongly oppose any
restrictions on the retransmission consent property rights they were given by Congress in
the 1992 Cable Act. At the June 16, 2009 House hearing, Representative Boucher asked
the representative for the National Association of Broadcasters to meet with its
membership and report back the extent to which they would be willing to share in the
costs of providing local-into-local service in the smallest markets.
The House Judiciary Committee discussion draft includes a provision that would address this
issue from a different perspective. As a result of repeated violations of section 119 of the
Copyright Act, DISH Network is subject to a permanent court injunction barring it from
retransmitting distant signals to its subscribers. The discussion draft would waive the injunction if
DISH Network provides local-into-local service in all 210 local markets in the United States.
Some observers have expressed concern that the discussion draft would leave it to the Copyright
Office, which does not have adjudicatory experience or technical communications expertise, to
make a determination that DISH Network has willfully and intentionally stopped providing local-
into-local service in all markets or is in fact making a good faith effort to serve all markets. These
observers have suggested that this responsibility is better left to the FCC, which has the requisite
adjudicatory experience and technical expertise.


(...continued)
DirecTV, Inc., before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, Subcommittee on Communication Technology,
and the Internet, June 16, 2009, at pp. 6-14, which describes in detail the industry position on the issue of mandatory
local-into-local service.
Congressional Research Service
31

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Appendix. “Orphan Counties”
Table A-1. Counties and Television Households in Each State That Are Located in Designated Market Areas (DMAs)
for which the Primary City Is Outside the State
Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
Alabama
1,860,130
Atlanta, GA
Cleburne
6,040
Atlanta, GA DMA: no station with city of license
in AL;





Randolph
8,750



Columbus, GA
Barbour
9,910
Columbus, GA DMA: one commercial station
with city of license in Opelika, AL and one





Chambers
14,120

public/educational station transmitting from





Lee
54,960

Louisville, AL;





Russel
20,700




Columbus-Tupelo-
Lamar
5,930
Columbus-Tupelo-West Point, MS DMA: no
West Point, MS
station with city of license in AL;


Meridian, MS
Choctaw
5,790
Meridian, MS DMA: no station with city of
license in AL.





Sumter
5,230





131,430
7.07%
Alaska
212,980
None


0
0.00%
Arizona
2,394,980
Albuquerque-
Apache (N)
14,350
Albuquerque-Santa Fe, NM DMA: no station with
Santa Fe, NM
city of license in AZ.




14,350
0.60%
CRS-32

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
Arkansas
1,127,320
Memphis, TN
Crittenden
19,590
Memphis, TN DMA: no station with city of
license in AR;





Cross
7,150






Lee
3,430






Mississippi
17,430






Phillips
7,870






Poinsett
9,800






St.
Francis
9,180



Springfield, MO
Baxter
19,150
Springfield, MO DMA: one commercial station
with city of license in Harrison, AR;





Boone
15,440






Carroll
11,010






Fulton
4,880






Marion
7,000






Newton
3,500



Shreveport, LA
Columbia
9,480
Shreveport, LA DMA: no station with city of
license in AR;





Hempstead
8,700






Howard
5,270






Lafayette
3,160






Little
River
5,290






Miller
16,780






Nevada
3,650






Sevier
5,730

CRS-33

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)



Monroe, LA-

Ashley
8,750

Monroe, LA-El Dorado, AR DMA: one NBC-
El Dorado, AR
affiliated commercial station with city of license



Union
17,080
in El Dorado, AR and one other commercial




219,320
19.45% station with city of license in El Dorado, AR.
California
12,369,370
Reno, NV
Alpine
460
Reno, NV DMA: no station with city of license in
CA;





Lassen
9,570






Mono
5,040




Medford- Siskiyou
18,620
Medford-Klamath Falls, OR DMA: no station
Klamath Falls, OR
with city of license in CA;



Yuma,
AZ- Imperial
46,980
Yuma, AZ-El Centro, CA DMA: one Fox-
El Centro, CA
affiliated commercial station with city of license
in El Centro, CA, one Univision-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in El
Centro, and one Telefutura-affiliated commercial
station with city of license in Calipatria, CA.




80,210
0.65%
Colorado
1,896,020
Albuquerque, NM
La Plata
19,750
Albuquerque, NM DMA: one CBS-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in





Montezuma
10,190

Durango, CO that is a satellite of an
Albuquerque, NM station and one Telemundo-
affiliated commercial station with city of license
in Durango, CO that is a satellite of an
Albuquerque, NM station.




29,940
1.58%
Connecticut 1,340,730
New York City, NY Fairfield
325,740
New York City, NY DMA: one commercial
station with city of license in Bridgeport, CT, and
one public/ educational station transmitting from
Bridgeport, CT.




325,740
24.30%
CRS-34

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
Delaware
337,290
Philadelphia, PA
Kent
59,980
Philadelphia, PA DMA: one commercial station
with city of license in Wilmington, DE and one





New
Castle
200,070

public/educational station transmitting from
Wilmington;


Salisbury, MD
Sussex
77,240
Salisbury, MD DMA: one public/educational
station transmitting from Seaford, DE.




337,290
100%
DC
257,650
None


0
0.00%
Florida
7,439,250
Mobile, AL-Pensacola-
Escambia
120,340
Mobile, AL-Pensacola-Fort Walton Beach, FL
Fort Walton Beach, FL
DMA: three commercial stations with city of




Okaloosa
78,970

license in Fort Walton Beach, FL, three



Santa
Rosa
54,430
commercial stations (including one ABC affiliate)
with city of license in Pensacola, FL, and one
public/educational station transmitting from
Pensacola, FL.




253,740
3.40%
Georgia
3,586,760
Greenville-Spartanburg-
Elbert
8,160

Greenville-Spartanburg-Anderson, SC-Asheville,
Anderson, SC-Asheville,
NC DMA: one CBS-affiliated commercial station




Franklin
8,590

NC
with city of license in Toccoa, GA;




Hart
9,960




Stephens
10,050




Jacksonville, FL

Brantley
6,050

Jacksonville, FL DMA: one commercial station
with city of license in Brunswick, GA and one




Camden
16,940

public/educational station transmitting from



Charlton
3,470
Waycross, GA;





Glynn
30,640






Pierce
7,180






Ware
13,930

CRS-35

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)


Chattanooga, TN
Catoosa
24,840
Chattanooga, TN DMA: one commercial station
with city of license in Dalton, GA and one





Dade
6,100

public/educational station transmitting from





Murray
15,010

Chatsworth-Dalton, GA;





Walker
25,590






Whitfield
32,190



Dothan, AL
Early
4,560
Dothan, AL DMA: no station with city of license
in GA;



Tallahassee, FL-

Brooks
6,360

Tallahassee, FL-Thomasville, GA DMA: one
Thomasville, GA
FOX-affiliated commercial station with city of



Clinch
2,680
license in Bainbridge, GA, one CBS-affiliated





Decatur
10,600

commercial station with city of license in
Thomasville, GA, and one CBS-affiliated





Echols
1,380

commercial station with city of license in
Valdosta, GA.





Grady
9,530






Lanier
2,970






Lowndes
38,260






Miller
2,470






Seminole
3,470






Thomas
17,750





318,730
8.89%
CRS-36

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
Hawai
429,940
None


0
0.00%
Idaho
561,020
Salt Lake City, UT
Bear Lake
1,990
Salt Lake City, UT DMA: no station with city of
license in ID;





Franklin
3,780






Oneida
1,470



Spokane, WA
Benewah
3,580
Spokane, WA DMA: one CBS-affiliated
commercial station (affiliated with a station in





Bonner
16,370

Yakima, WA) with city of license in Lewiston, ID,





Boundary
4,030

one public/educational station transmitting from
Couer d’Alene, ID, and one public/ educational





Clearwater
3,080

station transmitting from Moscow, ID.





Idaho
5,850






Kootenai
53,100






Latah
13,000






Lewis
1,460






Nez
Perce
16,010






Shoshone
5,570





129,290
23.05%
Illinois
4,759,150
St. Louis, MO
Bond
6,450
St. Louis, MO DMA: one commercial station with
city of license in East St. Louis, IL;





Calhoun
2,090






Clay
5,540






Clinton
13,550






Fayette
8,020






Greene
5,350






Jersey
8,660

CRS-37

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)





Macoupin 19,150






Madison
108,570






Marion
15,780






Monroe
12,430






Montgomery
11,160






Randolph
11,960






St.
Clair
101,790






Washington
5,600



Evansville, IN
Edwards
2,790
Evansville, IN DMA: no station with city of
license in IL;





Wabash
4,870






Wayne
6,900






White
6,260



Terre Haute, IN
Clark
6,970
Terre Haute, IN DMA: one public/educational
station transmitting from Olney, IL;





Crawford
7,470






Jasper
3,770






Lawrence
5,930






Richland
6,420

CRS-38

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)



Paducah,
KY-Cape
Alexander
3,280
Paducah, KY-Cape Girardeau, MO-Mount
Girardeau, MO-Mount
Vernon, IL DMA: one commercial station with
Vernon, IL
city of license in Marion, IL, one ABC-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in





Franklin
16,750

Harrisburg, IL, one commercial station with city





Gal atin
2,580

of license in Mt. Vernon, IL, and one public/
educational station transmitting from





Hamilton
3,270

Carbondale, IL;





Hardin
1,880






Jackson
24,550






Jefferson
15,600






Johnson
4,450






Massac
6,260






Perry
8,440






Pope
1,690






Pulaski
2,470






Saline
10,720






Union
7,360






Williamson
27,310




Davenport, IA-Rock

Bureau
14,220

Davenport, IA-Rock Island-Moline, IL DMA: one
Island-Moline, IL
CBS-affiliated commercial station with city of




Carroll
6,550

license in Rock Island, IL, one ABC-affiliated




Henderson
3,100

commercial station with city of license in Moline,
IL, and one public/educational station




Henry
19,750

transmitting from Moline, IL.



Jo
Daviess
9,610






Knox
20,350

CRS-39

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)





Mercer
6,480






Rock
Island
60,920






Warren
6,580






Whiteside
23,440





695,090
14.61%
Indiana
2,480,150
Chicago, IL
Jasper
11,820
Chicago, IL DMA: one commercial station with
city of license in Gary, IN, one commercial





Lake
186,930

station with city of license in Hammond, IN, and





LaPorte
42,100

one public/educational station transmitting from
Gary, IN;





Newton
5,150






Porter
62,990



Cincinnati, OH
Dearborn
18,770
Cincinnati, OH DMA: no station with city of
license in IN;





Franklin
8,470






Ohio
2,290






Ripley
10,320






Switzerland
3,790






Union
2,770



Louisville, KY
Clark
45,080
Louisville, KY DMA: one commercial station with
city of license in Salem, IN;





Crawford
4,230






Floyd
29,110






Harrison
14,430






Jackson
16,720






Jefferson
12,800

CRS-40

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)





Jennings
10,560






Orange
7,910






Scott
9,420






Washington
10,730



Champaign & Springfield Warren
3,260
Champaign & Springfield-Decatur, IL DMA: no
-Decatur, IL
station with city of license in IN.




519,650
21.00%
Iowa
1,198,410
Omaha, NE
Cass
5,780
Omaha, NE DMA: one public/educational station
transmitting from Council Bluffs, IA and one





Crawford
6,280

public/ educational station transmitting from Red





Fremont
3,080

Oak, IA;





Harrison
6,070






Mills
5,680






Montgomery
4,480






Page
6,130






Pottawattamie
35,390






Shelby
4,880



Sioux Fal s, SD
Lyon
4,080
Sioux Falls, SD DMA: no station with city of
license in IA;





Osceola
2,480




Rochester, MN-Mason
Cerro
Gordo
18,430

Rochester, MN-Mason City, IA-Austin, MN
City, IA-Austin, MN
DMA: one CBS-affiliated commercial station with




Floyd
6,680

city of license in Mason City, IA and one public/



Hancock
4,460
educational station transmitting from Mason City,
IA;





Howard
3,770

CRS-41

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)





Mitchel
4,270






Winnebago
4,490






Worth
3,180




Quincy,
IL-Hannibal,
Lee
14,130
Quincy, IL-Hannibal, MO-Keokuk, IA DMA: no
MO-Keokuk, IA
station with city of license in IA.




143,740
12.00%
Kansas
1,080,320
Kansas City, MO
Anderson
3,030
Kansas City, MO DMA: one commercial station
with city of license in Lawrence, KS;





Atchison
6,270






Douglas
44,330






Franklin
10,180






Johnson
210,650






Leavenworth
25,240






Linn
3,870






Miami
11,620






Wyandotte
57,580



Tulsa, OK
Chautauqua
1,470
Tulsa, OK DMA: no station with city of license in
KS;





Montgomery
14,130




Lincoln and Hastings-

Jewel
1,390

Lincoln and Hastings-Kearney, NE DMA: no
Kearney, NE
station with city of license in KS;




Phillips
2,180





Republic
2,080




Smith
1,690

CRS-42

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)


St. Joseph, MO
Doniphan
2,990
St. Joseph, MO DMA: no station with city of
license in KS;


Joplin, MO-Pittsburg, KS Al en
5,350
Joplin, MO-Pittsburg, KS DMA: one CBS-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in





Bourbon
5,830

Pittsburg, KS and one Fox-affiliated commercial





Cherokee
8,250

station with city of license in Pittsburg, KS.





Crawford
15,700






Labette
8,800






Neosho
6,370






Wilson
3,880






Woodson
1,360





454,240
42.05%
Kentucky
1,724,070

Nashville, TN
Allen
7,450
Nashville, TN DMA: no station with city of
license in KY;





Christian
29,170






Clinton
4,100






Cumberland
2,700






Logan
10,960






Monroe
4,760






Simpson
6,860






Todd
4,610






Trigg
5,750

CRS-43

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)


Cincinnati, OH
Boone
43,370
Cincinnati, OH DMA: one Fox-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in





Bracken
3,490

Newport, KY, one public/ educational station





Campbel
35,050

transmitting from Covington, KY, and one
public/educational station transmitting from





Gal atin
2,970

Owenton, KY;





Grant
9,430






Kenton
63,860






Mason
7,240






Owen
4,430






Pendleton
5,480






Robertson
790



Knoxville, TN
Bell
11,970
Knoxville, TN DMA: one commercial station
with city of license in Harlan, KY;





Harlan
13,010






McCreary
6,800




Charleston-Huntington,
Boyd
19,830

Charleston-Huntington, WV DMA: one
WV
commercial station with city of license in




Carter
11,010

Ashland, KY, one public/ educational station




Elliott
2,930

transmitting from Ashland, KY, and one
public/educational station transmitting from




Floyd
17,690

Pikeville, KY;




Greenup
15,410





Johnson
9,730





Lawrence
6,510





Lewis
5,530




Martin
4,550

CRS-44

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)




Pike
27,500




Tri-Cities (Kingsport-

Leslie
4,780

Tri-Cities (Kingsport-Johnson City, TN-Bristol,
Johnson City, TN-
VA) DMA: no station with city of license in KY;


Bristol, VA)
Letcher
9,960



Evansville, IN
Daviess
38,250
Evansville, IN DMA: one commercial station with
city of license in Madisonville, KY, one





Hancock
3,460

public/educational station transmitting from





Henderson
18,820

Madisonville, KY, and one public/ educational
station transmitting from Owensboro, KY.





Hopkins
19,140






McLean
3,960






Muhlenberg
12,370






Ohio
9,420






Union
5,580






Webster
5,420





535,310
31.05%
Louisiana
1,659,410
None


0
0.00%
Maine
553,220
None


0
0.00%
Maryland
2,122,440
Washington, DC
Al egany
28,630
Washington, DC DMA: one NBC-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in





Calvert
30,940

Hagerstown, MD, one other commercial station





Charles
50,670

with city of license in Hagerstown, MD, one
public/educational station transmitting from





Frederick
82,740

Hagerstown, MD, and one public/educational
station transmitting from Frederick, MD;





Montgomery
345,720






Prince
George’s 295,210






St.
Mary’s 37,400

CRS-45

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)





Washington
56,950



Pittsburgh, PA
Garrett
11,400
Pittsburgh, PA DMA: one public/educational
station transmitting from Oakland, MD.




939,660
44.27%
Massachusetts 2,492,190
Albany-Schenectady-
Berkshire
54,410
Albany-Schenectady-Troy, NY DMA: one ABC-
Troy, NY
affiliated commercial station with city of license
in Adams, MA that is a satellite of an Albany, NY
station;



Providence,
RI-New
Bristol
211,320
Providence, RI-New Bedford, MA DMA: one
Bedford, MA
ABC-affiliated commercial station with city of
license in New Bedford, MA and one other
commercial station with city of license in New
Bedford, MA.




265,730
10.66%
Michigan
3,881,920
Green
Bay-Appleton,
Menominee
10,350
Green Bay-Appleton, WI DMA: no station with
WI
city of license in MI (one CBS-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in
Escanaba, MI is in the Marquette, MI DMA but is
a satellite of a Green Bay, WI station);


Toledo, OH
Lenawee
37,510
Toledo, OH DMA: no station with city of license
in MI;


South Bend-Elkhart, IN Berrien
62,520
South Bend-Elkhart, IN DMA: no station with
city of license in MI;





Cass
19,880




Duluth,
MN-Superior,
Gogebic
6,560
Duluth, MN-Superior, WI DMA: no station with
WI
city of license in MI.




136,820
3.52%
CRS-46

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
Minnesota
2,042,050
Sioux Fal s, SD
Lincoln
2,490
Sioux Fal s, SD DMA: one public/educational
station transmitting from Worthington, MN;





Murray
3,480






Nobles
7,550






Pipestone
3,860






Rock
3,760



Fargo-Val ey City, ND Becker
13,020
Fargo-Valley City, ND DMA: one FOX-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in Thief





Clay
20,940

River Falls, MN that is a satellite of a Fargo, ND





Clearwater
3,300

station;





Kittson
1,790




Lake of the Woods
1,760






Mahnomen
1,990






Marshal
3,980






Norman
2,680






Pennington
5,660






Polk
12,120






Red
Lake
1,680






Roseau
6,120






Wilkin
2,490




La Crosse-Eau Claire,
Houston
7,750

La Crosse-Eau Claire, WI DMA: no station with
WI
city of license in MN.



Winona
18,870





125,290
6.14%
CRS-47

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
Mississippi
1,093,690
New Orleans, LA
Hancock
16,130
New Orleans, LA DMA: no station with city of
license in MS;





Pearl
River
22,330



Memphis, TN
Alcorn
15,010
Memphis, TN DMA: one commercial station with
city of license in Holly Springs, MS and one





Benton
3,080

public/educational station transmitting from





Coahoma
9,220

Oxford, MS;





DeSoto
58,400






Lafayette
16,790






Marshal
13,170






Panola
12,940






Quitman
3,050






Tate
9,710






Tippah
8,380






Tunica
3,890




Mobile, AL-Pensacola-
George
7,720

Mobile, AL-Pensacola-Fort Walton Beach, FL
Fort Walton Beach, FL
DMA: no station with city of license in MS;



Greene
4,160



Baton Rouge, LA
Amite
5,230
Baton Rouge, LA DMA: no station with city of
license in MS.





Wilkinson
3,630





212,840
19.46%
CRS-48

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
Missouri
2,345,310
Omaha, NE
Atchison
2,570
Omaha, NE DMA: no station with city of license
in MO;



Paducah, KY-Cape

Bollinger
4,660

Paducah, KY-Cape Girardeau-Harrisburg, MO-
Girardeau-Harrisburg,
Mount Vernon, IL DMA: one FOX-affiliated




Butler
17,140

MO-Mount Vernon, IL
commercial station with city of license in Cape




Cape
Girardeau
29,720

Girardeau, MO, one CBS-affiliated commercial
station with city of license in Cape Girardeau,




Carter
2,300

MO, and one commercial station with city of
license in Poplar Bluff, MO that is a satellite of a




Dunklin
12,640

Harrisburg, IL station;




Madison
4,950





Mississippi
5,380





New
Madrid
7,080





Pemiscot
7,410





Perry
7,360





Scott
16,000





Stoddard
12,220




Wayne
5,330




Quincy, IL-Hannibal,

Clark
2,980

Quincy, IL-Hannibal, MO-Keokuk, IA DMA: one
MO-Keokuk, IA
CBS- and ABC-affiliated commercial station with




Knox
1,650

city of license in Hannibal, MO;




Lewis
3,770





Marion
11,140





Monroe
3,680





Ral s
3,890




Shelby
2,580

CRS-49

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)



Ottumwa, IA-Kirksville,
Adair
9,520

Ottumwa, IA-Kirksville, MO DMA: one ABC-
MO
affiliated commercial station with city of license




Macon
6,400

in Kirksville, MO.




Putnam
2,080





Schuyler
1,690





Scotland
1,760




Sullivan
2,560





188,460
8.04%
Montana
383,090
Spokane, WA
Lincoln
7,850
Spokane, WA DMA: no station with city of
license in MT;



Minot-Bismarck-

Daniels
690

Minot-Bismarck-Dickinson, ND DMA: no station
Dickinson, ND
with city of license in MT;




Fal on
1,060





McCone
,690





Richland
3,870





Roosevelt
3,350





Sheridan
1,380




Wibaux
390



Rapid City, SD
Carter
490
Rapid City, SD DMA: no station with city of
license in MT.




17,510
4.57%
CRS-50

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
Nebraska
701,680
Denver, CO
Arthur
100
Denver, CO DMA: one public/educational station
transmitting from Alliance, NE;





Banner
300






Box
Butte
4,390






Cheyenne
4,180






Dawes
3,440






Deuel
800






Garden
790






Grant
190






Hooker
290






Keith
3,380






Kimbal
1,490






Sheridan
2,270






Sioux
590



Wichita-Hutchinson, KS Dundy
790
Wichita-Hutchinson, KS DMA: one NBC-
affiliated station with city of license in McCook,
NE that is a satellite of a Wichita, KS station;


Sioux Fal s, SD
Cherry
2,380
Sioux Fal s, SD DMA: one public/educational
station transmitting from Merriman, NE;


Sioux City, IA
Cedar
3,180
Sioux City, IA DMA: one public/educational
station transmitting from Norfolk, NE;





Dakota
6,990






Dixon
2,390






Knox
3,450






Madison
12,820

CRS-51

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)





Pierce
2,680






Stanton
2,280






Thurston
2,190






Wayne
3,190



Rapid City, SD
Morrill
1,980
Rapid City, SD DMA: no station with city of
license in NE;



Cheyenne,
WY-
Scotts Bluff
14,770
Cheyenne, WY-Scottsbluff, NE DMA: one ABC-
Scottsbluff, NE
affiliated commercial station with city of license
in Scottsbluff, NE that is affiliated with a Rapid
City, SD station, one CBS-affiliated commercial
station with city of license in Scottsbluff, NE that
is a satellite of a Cheyenne, WY station, and one
other commercial station with city of license in
Scottsbluff, NE.




77,450
11.04%
Nevada
991,230
Salt Lake City, UT
Elko
15,990
Salt Lake City, UT DMA: one NBC-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in Elko,





Eureka
570

NV and one NBC-affiliated commercial station





White
Pine
3,450

with city of license in Ely, NV that is a satellite of
a Las Vegas, NV station.




19,440
1.96%
New
512,040
Portland-Auburn, ME Carroll
20,100
Portland-Auburn, ME DMA: no station with city
Hampshire
of license in NH;



Coos
13,940




Burlington,
VT-
Grafton
32,590
Burlington, VT-Plattsburgh, NY DMA: one public/
Plattsburgh, NY
educational station transmitting from Littleton,
NH;





Sullivan
17,870

CRS-52

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)



Boston, MA-

Belknap
25,000

Boston, MA-Manchester, NH DMA: one ABC-
Manchester, NH
affiliated commercial station with city of license




Cheshire
29,950

in Manchester, NH, one Telemundo-affiliated




Hillsborough 153,330

commercial station with city of license in
Merrimack, NH, one commercial station with




Merrimack
57,430

city of license in Derry, NH, one commercial
station with city of license in Concord, NH that




Rockingham
114,740

is a satellite of a Boston, MA station, one



Strafford
47,090
public/educational station transmitting from
Durham, NH, and one public/ educational station
transmitting from Keene, NH.




512,040
100%
New Jersey 3,159,830
New York City, NY Bergen
333,540
New York City, NY DMA: one Telefutura-
affiliated commercial station with city of license





Essex
273,970

in Newark, NJ, one Univision-affiliated





Hudson
221,690

commercial station with city of license in
Paterson, NJ, one Telemundo-affiliated





Hunterdon
46,520

commercial station with city of license in Linden,
NJ, one commercial station with city of license in





Middlesex
278,160

Secaucus, NJ, one commercial station with city of





Monmouth
235,940

license in Newton, NJ, one public/educational
station transmitting from Montclair, NJ, one





Morris
177,440

public/educational station transmitting from





Ocean
224,690

West Milford, NJ, one public/educational station
transmitting from New Brunswick, NJ, and one





Passaic
159,650

public/ educational station transmitting from
New ark, NJ;





Somerset
117,740






Sussex
54,700






Union
183,420






Warren
41,750

CRS-53

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)


Philadelphia, PA
Atlantic
102,780
Philadelphia, PA DMA: one Telemundo-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in Atlantic





Burlington
166,510

City, NJ, one other commercial station with city





Camden
189,960

of license in Atlantic City, NJ, one Univision-
affiliated commercial station with city of license





Cape
May
40,210

in Vineland, NJ, one NBC-affiliated commercial
station with city of license in Wildwood, NJ, one





Cumberland
51,790

commercial station with city of license in





Gloucester
105,440

Burlington, NJ, one public/educational station
transmitting from Camden, NJ, and one





Mercer
128,740

public/educational station transmitting from
Trenton, NJ.





Salem
25,190





3,159,830
100%
New Mexico 745,730
Amarillo, TX
Curry
17,170
Amarillo, TC DMA: one ABC-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in Clovis,





Quay
3,750

NM that is a satellite of an Amarillo, TX station





Roosevelt
6,780

and one public/educational station transmitting
from Portales, NM;





Union
1,550



Odessa-Midland, TX Lea (S)
1,990
Odessa-Midland, TX DMA: one commercial
station with city of license in Hobbs, NM;


El Paso, TX-Las Cruces, Dona Ana
69,660
El Paso, TX-Las Cruces, NM DMA: one
NM
Telemundo-affiliated commercial station with city
of license in Las Cruces, NM and one
public/educational station transmitting from Las
Cruces, NM.




100,900
13.53%
CRS-54

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
New York
7,094,620
Burlington, VT-
Clinton
31,080
Burlington, VT-Plattsburgh, NY DMA: one NBC-
Plattsburgh, NY
affiliated commercial station with city of license
in North Pole, NY and one public/educational





Essex
15,030

station transmitting from Plattsburgh, NY.





Franklin
18,050





64,160
0.90%
North
3,636,710
Atlanta, GA
Clay
4,800
Atlanta, GA DMA: no station with city of license
Carolina
in NC;



Norfolk-Portsmouth-

Camden
3,980

Norfolk-Portsmouth-Newport News, VA DMA:
Newport News, VA
one commercial station with city of license in



Chowan
5,900
Manteo, NC and one public/educational station





Currituck
9,630

transmitting from Edenton, NC;





Dare
14,790






Gates
4,560






Hertford
8,870






Pasquotank
15,800






Perquimans
5,430



Chattanooga, TN
Cherokee
11,920
Chattanooga, TN DMA: no station with city of
license in NC;



Myrtle Beach-Florence,
Robeson
45,180

Myrtle Beach-Florence, SC DMA: one
SC
public/educational station transmitting from



Scotland
13,690
Lumberton, NC;
CRS-55

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)



Greenville-Spartanburg-
Buncombe
95,860

Greenville-Spartanburg-Anderson, SC-Asheville,
Anderson, SC-Asheville,
NC DMA: one ABC-affiliated station with city of




Graham
3,380

NC
license in Asheville, NC that is affiliated with a




Haywood
24,920

station in Anderson, SC, one other commercial
station with city of license in Asheville, NC, and




Henderson
44,190

one public/educational station transmitting from
Asheville, NC.




Jackson
15,080




Macon
14,410






Madison
8,370






McDowel
17,660






Mitchel
6,740






Polk
8,310






Rutherford
25,810






Swain
5,620






Transylvania
13,320






Yancey
7,830





436,050
11.99%
North Dakota 264,630
None

0
0.00%
CRS-56

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
Ohio
4,550,660
Charleston-Huntington, Gallia
12,320
Charleston-Huntington, WV DMA: one
WV
commercial station with city of license in




Jackson
13,070

Portsmouth, OH and one public/educational




Lawrence
25,800

station transmitting from Portsmouth, OH;




Meigs
9,390





Scioto
30,210




Vinton
5,220



Fort Wayne, IN
Paulding
7,510
Fort Wayne, IN DMA: no station with city of
license in OH;





Van
Wert
11,570



Parkersburg, WV
Washington
24,810
Parkersburg DMA: no station with city of license
in OH;



Wheeling, WV-

Belmont
27,800

Wheeling, WV-Steubenville, OH DMA: one
Steubenville, OH
NBC-affiliated commercial station with city of




Harrison
6,460

license in Steubenville, OH.





Jefferson
28,490





Monroe
5,690





208,340
4.58%
Oklahoma
1,428,630
Shreveport, LA
McCurtain
12,850
Shreveport, LA DMA: no station with city of
license in OK;



Fort Smith-Fayetteville,
Le
Flore
18,530

Fort Smith-Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers, AR
Springdale-Rogers, AR
DMA: no station with city of license in OK;



Sequoyah
15,700



Amarillo, TX
Beaver
1,970
Amarillo, TX DMA: no station with city of
license in OK;





Cimarron
970






Texas
6,820

CRS-57

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)


Joplin, MO-Pittsburg, KS Ottawa
12,280
Joplin, MO-Pittsburg, KS DMA: no station with
city of license in OK;



Wichita Falls, TX-

Comanche
41,370

Wichita Falls, TX-Lawton, OK DMA: one ABC-
Lawton, OK
affiliated commercial station with city of license




Cotton
2,490

in Lawton, OK;




Jackson
9,420





Jefferson
2,480





Stephens
17,760




Tillman
3,080



Sherman, TX-Ada, OK Atoka
5,350
Sherman, TX-Ada, OK DMA: one NBC-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in Ada,





Bryan
15,910

OK.





Carter
19,040






Choctaw
6,050






Coal
2,170






Johnston
4,070






Love
3,560






Marshal
6,140






Pontotoc
14,750






Pushmataha
4,630





226,420
15.85%
CRS-58

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
Oregon
1,469,220
Spokane, WA
Wal owa
2,910

Spokane, WA DMA: no station with city of
license in OR;


Boise, ID
Malheur
9,840
Boise, ID DMA: no station with city of license in
OR:



Yakima-Pasco-Richland- Umatilla
25,270
Yakima-Pasco-Richland-Kennewick,
WA
DMA:
Kennewick, WA
one FOX-affiliated commercial station with city
of license in Pendleton, OR.




38,020
2.59%
Pennsylvania 4,876,070
New York City, NY Pike
22,870
New York City, NY DMA: no station with city of
license in PA;


Washington, DC
Fulton
6,220
Washington, DC DMA: no station with city of
license in PA;


Buffalo, NY
McKean
16,990
Buffalo, NY DMA: no station with city of license
in PA;





Potter
6,350



Youngstown, OH
Mercer
45,840
Youngstown, OH DMA: no station with city of
license in PA;


Elmira, NY
Tioga
15,730
Elmira, NY DMA: no station with city of license
in PA.




114,000
2.34%
Rhode Island 411,260
0 None

0
0.00%
CRS-59

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
South
1,765,850
Charlotte, NC
Chester
12,600
Charlotte, NC DMA: one commercial station
Carolina
with city of license in Rock Hill, SC and one
public/educational station transmitting from Rock





Chesterfield
17,170

Hill, SC;





Lancaster
29,860






York
83,330



Savannah, GA
Beaufort
59,580
Savannah, GA DMA: one FOX-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in





Hampton
7,700

Hardeeville, SC and one public/educational





Jasper
7,680

station transmitting from Beaufort, SC;


Augusta, GA
Aiken
59,940
Augusta, GA DMA: one public/educational
station transmitting from Allendale, SC.





Al endale
3,660






Bamberg
5,900






Barnwel
9,180






Edgefield
8,660






McCormick
3,880





309,140
17.51%
South Dakota 313,560
Sioux City, IA
Union
5,660
Sioux City, IA DMA: no station with city of
license in SD;



Minot-Bismarck-
Corson
1,280
Minot-Bismarck-Dickinson, ND DMA: no station
Dickinson, ND
with city of license in SD.




6,940
2.21%
CRS-60

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
Tennessee
2,492,660

Paducah, KY-Cape

Lake
2,080

Paducah, KY-Cape Girardeau-Harrisburg, MO-
Girardeau-Harrisburg,
Mount Vernon, IL DMA: no station with city of




Obion
13,020

MO-Mount Vernon, IL
license in TN;



Weakley
13,210



Huntsville-Decatur, AL Lincoln
13,380
Huntsville-Decatur, AL DMA: no station with city
of license in TN.




41,690
1.67%
Texas
8,586,370
Shreveport, LA
Bowie
34,670
Shreveport, LA DMA: one NBC-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in





Cass
12,280

Texarkana, TX.





Harrison
24,090






Marion
4,570






Morris
5,300






Panola
9,090






Shelby
9,970






Titus
10,010





109,980
1.28%
Utah
859,650
None


0
0.00%
Vermont
249,410

Boston,
MA-
Windham
17,930
Boston, MA-Manchester, NH DMA: no station
Manchester, NH
with city of license in VT;



Albany-Schenectady-
Bennington
14,780
Albany-Schenectady-Troy, NY DMA: no station
Troy, NY
with city of license in VT.




32,710
13.11%
CRS-61

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
Virginia
3,004,970
Washington, DC
Arlington
155,200
Washington, DC DMA: one commercial station
with city of license in Manassas, VA, one





Clarke
6,010

Telefutura-affiliated commercial station with city





Culpeper
17,410

of license in Arlington, VA, one
public/educational station transmitting from





Fairfax
382,320

Front Royal, VA, one public/educational station
transmitting from Fairfax, VA, and one





Fauquier
24,630

public/educational station transmitting from





Frederick
40,160

Goldvein, VA;





King
George
8,770






Loudoun
103,700






Page
10,140






Prince William 146,460






Rappahannock
2,860






Shenandoah
17,120






Spotsylvania
53,570






Stafford
41,010






Warren
13,950






Westmoreland
7,120



Raleigh-Durham, NC Mecklenburg
13,370
Raleigh-Durham, NC DMA: no station with city
of license in VA;



Greensboro-High
Point- Patrick
8,190
Greensboro-High Point-Winston Salem NC
Winston Salem, NC
DMA: no station with city of license in VA;



Bluefield,
Beckley-Oak
Tazewell
18,570
Bluefield-Beckley-Oak Hill, WV DMA: no station
Hill, WV
with city of license in VA;
CRS-62

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)



Tri-Cities (Kingsport-

Buchanan
9,460

Tri-Cities (Kingsport-Johnson City, TN-Bristol,
Johnson City, TN-
VA) DMA: one NBC-affiliated commercial station




Dickenson
6,930

Bristol, VA)
with city of license in Bristol, VA, one




Lee
10,120

commercial station with city of license in

Grundy, VA, one public/educational station




Russel
12,070

transmitting from Marion, VA, and one
public/educational station transmitting from




Scott
10,070

Norton, VA.




Smyth
13,600





Washington
30,420





Wise
17,990





1,181,220
39.31%
Washington 2,500,030
Portland, OR
Clark
153,210
Portland, OR DMA: one commercial station with
city of license in Vancouver, WA.





Cowlitz
38,290






Klickitat
7,570






Skamania
4,060






Wahkiakum
1,600





204,730
8.19%
CRS-63

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)
West Virginia 753,390
Washington, DC
Berkeley
40,920
Washington, DC DMA: one commercial station
with city of license in Martinsburg, WV;





Grant
5,030






Hampshire
9,090






Hardy
5,780






Jefferson
20,580






Mineral
10,770






Morgan
6,880



Pittsburgh, PA
Monongalia
35,040
Pittsburgh, PA DMA: one public/educational
station transmitting from Morgantown, WV;





Preston
12,420



Harrisonburg, VA
Pendleton
3,040
Harrisonburg, VA DMA: no station with city of
license in WV;


Roanoke-Lynchburg, VA Pocahontas
3,430
Roanoke-Lynchburg, VA DMA: no station with
city of license in WV.




152,980
20.31%
Wisconsin
2,248,370

Minneapolis-St. Paul,

Barron
18,740

Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN DMA: one
MN
public/educational station transmitting from




Burnett
7,090

Menomonie, WI;



Dunn
15,830






Pierce
14,640






Polk
18,140






St.
‘Croix
31,950






Washburn
7,000



Marquette, MI
Florence
2,190
Marquette, MI DMA: no station with city of
license in WI;
CRS-64

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)



Duluth,
MN-Superior,
Ashland
6,570
Duluth, MN-Superior, WI DMA: one NBC-
WI
affiliated commercial station with city of license
in Superior, WI.





Bayfield
6,450






Douglas
18,410






Iron
3,090






Sawyer
7,110





157,210
6.99%
Wyoming
211,220
Denver, CO
Albany
13,260
Denver, CO DMA: one ABC-affiliated
commercial station with city of license in Rawlins,





Campbel
15,930

WY that is a satellite of a Casper, WY station





Carbon
6,420

and one public/educational station transmitting
from Laramie, WY;





Johnson
3,600






Niobrara
980






Platte
3,480



Salt Lake City, UT
Lincoln
6,230
Salt Lake City, UT DMA: one CBS-affiliated
station with city of license in Rock Springs, WY





Sublette
3,380

that is an satellite of a Casper, WY station;





Sweetwater
15,530






Uinta
7,350



Idaho Falls-Pocatello, ID Teton
8,480
Idaho Falls-Pocatello, ID DMA: one NBC-
affiliated commercial station with city of license
in Jackson, WY that is a satellite of a Pocatello,
ID station and one other commercial station
with city of license in Jackson, WY that is a
satellite of a Pocatello, ID station;
CRS-65

.

Counties
Assigned to
Percentage of
DMA for which
TV Households
Primary City Is
in State
Number of
DMAs in State for
Outside the
Number of TV
Located in
Full Power Broadcast TV Stations in
TV Households which Primary City
State (Orphan
Households in
Orphan
DMAs for which Primary City Is Outside
State
in the State
Is Outside the State Counties)
Orphan County Counties
the State (in Orphan Counties)


Billings, MT
Big Horn
4,190
Billings, MT DMA: no station with city of license
in WY;





Park
11,230



Rapid City, SD
Crook
2,650
Rapid City, SD DMA: one ABC-affiliated
commercial with city of license in Sheridan, WY





Sheridan
12,010

that is a satellite of a Rapid City, SD station and





Weston
2,810

one other commercial station with city of license
in Sheridan WY that is a satellite of a Casper,
WY station.




116,550
55.18%
Sources: DMA definitions by A.C. Nielsen Data as presented in Warren Communications News, Television & Cable Factbook 2009, station volumes 1 and 2; television
households by states and counties, as of September 2008, from A.C. Nielsen Data, household estimates compiled by Market Statistics Inc., as reprinted in Warren
Communications News, Television & Cable Factbook 2009, station volume 2; commercial and public/educational station data from Warren Communications News, Television
& Cable Factbook 2009, station volume 2.

CRS-66

.
Reauthorizing the Satellite Home Viewing Provisions



Author Contact Information

Charles B. Goldfarb

Specialist in Telecommunications Policy
cgoldfarb@crs.loc.gov, 7-7252




Congressional Research Service
67