As we approach the end of the first quarter of 2004, it is time to remind broadcasters of their quarterly public file and FCC filing obligations. Specifically, the Issues/Program List discussed below must be completed by all broadcasters, while the children’s programming obligations relate to TV stations only. Additionally, we can provide information upon request relating to ongoing obligations under the Commission’s EEO requirements and, in this presidential election year, under the Commission’s political broadcasting rules as well. We can also provide general information regarding the local public inspection file.
Issues//programs list (all stations)
All full-power commercial TV, Class A TV, and commercial radio broadcast stations are required to maintain a list of programs “that have provided the station’s most significant treatment of community issues during the preceding three-month period.” These lists are to be put in the station’s public inspection file by the tenth day following the end of each quarter (i.e., by April 10 for the January-March quarter). The list should include a brief narrative describing the issues given significant treatment by the station and the programming that provided this treatment. The list should include the time, date, duration, and title of each program in which the issue was treated. These lists must be retained in the public file until final action on the station’s next license renewal application.
Children's programming (TV only)
A) Compliance with Commercial Limits: By the tenth day following each quarter (i.e., by April 10 for the January-March quarter), every full-power commercial and Class A TV station should place in its local public file records demonstrating compliance with the commercial limits on children’s programming established in the Communications Act and FCC rules. Those limits specify that no commercial television station shall air more than 10.5 minutes of commercial matter per hour during children’s programming on weekends or more than 12 minutes of commercial matter per hour during children’s programming on weekdays. For purposes of this rule, children’s programming refers to programs produced and broadcast primarily for an audience of children 12 years of age and younger. Please note that any commercial matter that relates to the subject of the program in which it appears could turn the entire program into a program length commercial, thereby violating the commercial limits.
B) Children’s TV Programming Reports: Also by the tenth day following each quarter, every full power commercial TV broadcast licensee is required to complete a Children’s Television Programming Report on FCC Form 398, describing efforts made by the licensee to serve the educational and informational needs of children. (This requirement does not apply to Class A TV stations.) This form is required to be filed electronically at the FCC with a copy placed in the station’s local public inspection file as well. The public file copy of this Report must be kept separate from other public file materials. The Report identifies programs specifically designed to serve the educational and informational needs of children and explains how so-called “core programming” qualifies as such. To qualify as core programming, a program must serve the educational and informational needs of children 16 years of age and under, must air between the hours of 7 a.m. and 10 p.m. on a regularly scheduled weekly basis and must be at least 30 minutes long. Any licensee that has aired at least three hours per week of core programming, averaged over a six-month period, will be deemed to have satisfied its obligations to air such programming, and shall be deemed to have satisfied that requirement in the renewal application. Licensees that do not meet these processing guidelines will be required to demonstrate compliance with the Children’s Television Act prior to grant of their renewal application. These reports should be kept in the station’s public file until final action on the station’s next license renewal application.