US Court Could Allow FCC Ban on Exclusive Cable Contracts
23 September 2009 - 4:58PM
Dow Jones News
A three-judge U.S. federal appeals court panel indicated Tuesday
it is inclined to give the Federal Communications Commission leeway
when assessing the agency's decision to bar cable operators from
withholding some television programs from competitors through
exclusive contracts.
Cablevision Systems Corp. (CVC) challenged the FCC's decision,
saying the rule isn't necessary to preserve competition in the paid
TV market.
"These are judgments that Congress has delegated to the FCC,"
said Judge Thomas Griffith during an oral argument at the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
"This is going to be reaching for us quite a lot to say [the
FCC's] predictive judgment isn't going to be enough," said Chief
Judge David Sentelle, referring to the FCC.
The ban on exclusive contracts for TV programs was set by
Congress in 1992. At the time, lawmakers were particularly
concerned about cable companies withholding popular programs that
they owned from competitors, effectively creating a monopoly.
The FCC most recently extended the exclusive contract ban in
2002, saying cable operators continue to dominate paid TV
subscribership and retain control over significant programming
networks that competitors need.
In a brief to the court, the FCC said some cable operators "own
many of the most highly demanded national networks and almost half
of all regional programming networks, including nearly half of all
regional sports networks."
Cablevision said the market has evolved considerably over the
last 17 years with the establishment of satellite TV and the
emerging paid TV services offered by phone companies like AT&T
Inc. (T) and Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ).
Cablevision may be bolstered in its argument by a decision
delivered by the same appeals court earlier this year striking down
an FCC rule saying cable operators can't serve more than 30% of
subscribers in a single market.
The ruling was a win for Comcast Corp. (CMCSA), which challenged
the 30% rule. Agreeing with Comcast, the court pointed to the
considerable competition cable operators face from satellite TV and
phone companies like Verizon and AT&T.
Arguing for Cablevision Tuesday, attorney Henk Brands said the
Comcast decision means the FCC now can't say there isn't enough
competition in the paid TV market. Brands is with the Washington
D.C. law firm of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison.
FCC attorney Nandan Joshi said the Cablevision case is different
because the commission devoted considerable effort to analyzing the
paid TV market before deciding to extend the exclusive contract ban
until 2012. "Competition still depends on access to a vast array of
programming," he said.
Judge Brett Kavanaugh noted that without the ban, prices for
consumers might go up if they are forced to buy both a satellite
and cable TV service to view all the sports programming they
desire.
-By Fawn Johnson, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9263;
fawn.johnson@dowjones.com