Goto Section: 76.963 | 76.971 | Table of Contents
FCC 76.970
Revised as of October 1, 2010
Goto Year:2009 |
2011
§ 76.970 Commercial leased access rates.
(a) Cable operators shall designate channel capacity for commercial use
by persons unaffiliated with the operator in accordance with the
requirement of 47 U.S.C. 532. For purposes of 47 U.S.C. 532(b)(1)(A)
and (B), only those channels that must be carried pursuant to 47 U.S.C.
534 and 535 qualify as channels that are required for use by Federal
law or regulation. For cable systems with 100 or fewer channels,
channels that cannot be used due to technical and safety regulations of
the Federal Government (e.g., aeronautical channels) shall be excluded
when calculating the set-aside requirement.
(b) In determining whether an entity is an "affiliate" for purposes of
commercial leased access, entities are affiliated if either entity has
an attributable interest in the other or if a third party has an
attributable interest in both entities.
(c) Attributable interest shall be defined by reference to the criteria
set forth in Notes 1-5 to § 76.501 provided, however, that:
(1) The limited partner and LLC/LLP/RLLP insulation provisions of Note
2(f) shall not apply; and
(2) The provisions of Note 2(a) regarding five (5) percent interests
shall include all voting or nonvoting stock or limited partnership
equity interests of five (5) percent or more.
(d) The maximum commercial leased access rate that a cable operator may
charge to programmers that predominantly transmit sales presentations
or program length commercials for full-time channel placement on a tier
exceeding a subscriber penetration of 50 percent is the average
implicit fee for full-time channel placement on all such tier(s).
(e) The average implicit fee identified in paragraph (d) of this
section for a full-time channel on a tier with a subscriber penetration
over 50 percent shall be calculated by first calculating the total
amount the operator receives in subscriber revenue per month for the
programming on all such tier(s), and then subtracting the total amount
it pays in programming costs per month for such tier(s) (the "total
implicit fee calculation"). A weighting scheme that accounts for
differences in the number of subscribers and channels on all such
tier(s) must be used to determine how much of the total implicit fee
calculation will be recovered from any particular tier. The weighting
scheme is determined in two steps. First, the number of subscribers is
multiplied by the number of channels (the result is the number of
"subscriber-channels"') on each tier with subscriber penetration over
50 percent. For instance, a tier with 10 channels and 1,000 subscribers
would have a total of 10,000 subscriber-channels. Second, the
subscriber-channels on each of these tiers is divided by the total
subscriber-channels on all such tiers. Given the percent of
subscriber-channels for the particular tier, the implicit fee for the
tier is computed by multiplying the subscriber-channel percentage for
the tier by the total implicit fee calculation. Finally, to calculate
the average implicit fee per channel, the implicit fee for the tier
must be divided by the corresponding number of channels on the tier.
The final result is the maximum rate per month that the operator may
charge the leased access programmer for a full-time channel on that
particular tier. The average implicit fee shall be calculated by using
all channels carried on any tier exceeding 50 percent subscriber
penetration (including channels devoted to affiliated programming,
must-carry and public, educational and government access channels). In
the event of an agreement to lease capacity on a tier with less than 50
percent penetration, the average implicit fee should be determined on
the basis of subscriber revenues and programming costs for that tier
alone. The license fees for affiliated channels used in determining the
average implicit fee shall reflect the prevailing company prices
offered in the marketplace to third parties. If a prevailing company
price does not exist, the license fee for that programming shall be
priced at the programmer's cost or the fair market value, whichever is
lower. The average implicit fee shall be based on contracts in effect
in the previous calendar year. The implicit fee for a contracted
service may not include fees, stated or implied, for services other
than the provision of channel capacity (e.g., billing and collection,
marketing, or studio services).
(f) The maximum commercial leased access rate that a cable operator may
charge for full-time channel placement as an a la carte service is the
highest implicit fee on an aggregate basis for full-time channel
placement as an a la carte service.
(g) The highest implicit fee on an aggregate basis for full-time
channel placement as an a la carte service shall be calculated by first
determining the total amount received by the operator in subscriber
revenue per month for each non-leased access a la carte channel on its
system (including affiliated a la carte channels) and deducting the
total amount paid by the operator in programming costs (including
license and copyright fees) per month for programming on such
individual channels. This calculation will result in implicit fees
determined on an aggregate basis, and the highest of these implicit
fees shall be the maximum rate per month that the operator may charge
the leased access programmer for placement as a full-time a la carte
channel. The license fees for affiliated channels used in determining
the highest implicit fee shall reflect the prevailing company prices
offered in the marketplace to third parties. If a prevailing company
price does not exist, the license fee for that programming shall be
priced at the programmer's cost or the fair market value, whichever is
lower. The highest implicit fee shall be based on contracts in effect
in the previous calendar year. The implicit fee for a contracted
service may not include fees, stated or implied, for services other
than the provision of channel capacity (e.g., billing and collection,
marketing, or studio services). Any subscriber revenue received by a
cable operator for an a la carte leased access service shall be passed
through to the leased access programmer.
(h) The maximum commercial leased access rate that a cable operator may
charge for part-time channel placement shall be determined by either
prorating the maximum full-time rate uniformly, or by developing a
schedule of and applying different rates for different times of the
day, provided that the total of the rates for a 24-hour period does not
exceed the maximum daily leased access rate.
(i) The maximum commercial leased access rate that a cable operator may
charge for full-time channel placement, except to programmers that
predominantly transmit sales presentations or program length
commercials, is the lower of the marginal implicit fee for a full-time
channel placement on the tier where the leased access programming will
be placed or $0.10 per subscriber per month.
(j)(1)(i) The marginal implicit fee identified in paragraph (i) of this
section for a full-time channel shall be calculated by first
determining the mark-up of the tier where the leased access programming
will be placed. The mark-up is calculated by determining the total
amount the operator receives in subscriber revenue per month for the
tier, and dividing by the total amount it pays in affiliation fees for
the channels located on the tier. The resulting figure is the mark-up.
In cases where the cost and channels of one tier are implicitly
incorporated into a larger tier, the larger tier price is equal to the
larger tier price minus the smaller tier price and the channels on the
larger tier are those that are not available on the smaller tier.
(ii) The monthly gross subscriber revenue per channel is obtained by
multiplying the monthly per subscriber affiliation fee for each channel
by the mark-up for the tier. The net subscriber revenue per channel per
month for each channel is the difference between the monthly gross
subscriber revenue per channel and the monthly per subscriber
affiliation fee paid for that channel by the cable operator. This value
represents the implicit fee for the individual channel.
(iii) To determine the marginal channels on the tier for systems with
55 or more activated channels, multiply the number of non-mandated
channels on the tier by 0.15 and round to the nearest number. To
determine the marginal channels on the tier for systems with 54 or less
activated channels, multiply the number of non-mandated channels on the
tier by 0.10 and round to the nearest number. That is the number of
marginal channels. Next identify the channels with the lowest implicit
fee until that number is reached. These are the marginal channels.
(iv) Finally, calculate the marginal implicit fee by taking the mean of
the implicit fees of the marginal channels by summing the implicit fees
of the marginal channels and dividing by the number of marginal
channels. The result is the marginal implicit fee.
(2) The affiliation fees for channels used in determining the marginal
implicit fee are the contractual license fee or retransmission consent
fee representing the compensation per subscriber per month paid to the
programmer for the right to carry the programming. It excludes fees for
services other than the provision of channel capacity, such as
marketing, and excludes revenues. The affiliation fees for channels
used in determining the marginal implicit fee shall reflect the
prevailing affiliation fees offered in the marketplace to third
parties. If a prevailing affiliation fee does not exist, the
affiliation fee for that programming shall be priced at the
programmer's cost or the fair market value, whichever is lower. The
marginal implicit fee calculation shall be based on affiliation fees in
contracts in effect in the previous calendar year. The implicit fee for
a contracted service may not include fees, stated or implied, for
services other than the provision of channel capacity (e.g., billing
and collection, marketing, or studio services).
(3) Operators shall maintain, for Commission inspection, sufficient
supporting documentation to justify the scheduled rates, including
supporting contracts, calculations of the implicit fees, and
justifications for all adjustments.
(4) Cable operators are permitted to negotiate rates below the maximum
permitted rates.
[ 73 FR 10690 , Feb. 28, 2008]
Effective Date Note: At 73 FR 10890 , Feb. 28, 2008, § 76.970 was
revised. Paragraph (j)(3) of this section contains information
collection and recordkeeping requirements and will not become effective
until approval has been given by the Office of Management and Budget.
Goto Section: 76.963 | 76.971
Goto Year: 2009 |
2011
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