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If you need the complete document, download the WordPerfect version or Adobe Acrobat version, if available. ***************************************************************** Before the FCC 97- 49 FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of ) ) Assessment and Collection ) MD Docket No. 96-186 of Regulatory Fees for ) Fiscal Year 1997 ) NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING Adopted: February 14, 1997 ; Released: March 5, 1997 Comment Date: March 25, 1997 Reply Date: April 4, 1997 By the Commission: Table of Contents Topic Paragraph Numbers I. Introduction 1-3 II. Background 4-7 III. Discussion 8-51 A. Summary of FY 1997 Fee Methodology 8-12 B. Development of FY 1997 Fees 13-25 1. Adjustment of Payment Units 13 2. Calculation of Revenue Requirements 14 3. Calculation of Regulatory Costs 15-16 4. Establishment of 25% Revenue Ceiling 17-18 5. Recalculation Of Fees 19 6. Other Proposed Change -- Consolidation of Private Microwave and Domestic Public Fixed Fee Categories 20-24 7. Effect of Revenue Redistributions on Major Constituencies25 C. Other Issues 26-43 1. Commercial AM/FM Radio 26-37 2. Personal Communications Service (PCS) 38 3. Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) 39 4. Intelsat & Inmarsat Signatories 40-42 5. Non-Common Carrier International Bearer Circuits 43 D. Procedures for Payment of Regulatory Fees 44-50 1. Annual Payments of Standard Fees 45 2. Installment Payments for Large Fees 46 3. Advance Payments of Small Fees 47 4. Minimum Fee Payment Liability 48 5. Standard Fee Calculations and Payments 49-50 E. Schedule of Regulatory Fees 51 IV. Procedural Matters 52-60 A. Comment Period and Procedures 52 B. Ex Parte Rules 53 C. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis 54 D. Paperwork Reduction Act Compliance 55-58 E. Authority and Further Information 59-60 Attachment A - Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis Attachment B - Sources of Payment Unit Estimates Attachment C - Calculation of Revenue Requirements Attachment D - Calculation of Regulatory Costs Attachment E - Calculation of FY 1997 Regulatory Fees Attachment F - Schedule of Regulatory Fees Attachment G - Comparison Between FY 1996 and FY 1997 Fees Attachment H - Detailed Guidance on Who Must Pay Regulatory Fees Attachment I - Description of FCC Activities I. Introduction 1. By this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, the Commission commences a proceeding to revise its Schedule of Regulatory Fees in order to recover the amount of regulatory fees that Congress, pursuant to Section 9(a) of the Communications Act, as amended, has required it to collect for Fiscal Year (FY) 1997. See 47 U.S.C.  159 (a). 2. Congress has required that we collect $152,523,000 through regulatory fees in order to recover the costs of our enforcement, policy and rulemaking, international and user information activities for FY 1997. Public Law 104-208 and 47 U.S.C.  159(a)(2). This amount is $26,123,000 or nearly 21% more than the amount that Congress designated for recovery through regulatory fees for FY 1996. See Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 1996, FCC 96-295, released July 5, 1996, 61 FR 36629 (July 12, 1996). Thus, we are proposing to revise our fees in order to collect the increased amount that Congress has required that we collect. Additionally, we propose to amend the Schedule in order to assess regulatory fees upon licensees and/or regulatees of services not previously subject to payment of a fee, to simplify and streamline the Fee Schedule, and to clarify and/or revise certain payment procedures. 47 U.S.C.  159(b)(3). 3. In proposing to revise our fees, we adjusted the payment units and revenue requirement for each service subject to a fee, consistent with Sections 159(b)(2) and (3). In addition, we have made changes to the fees pursuant to public interest considerations. The current Schedule of Regulatory Fees is set forth in sections 1.1152 through 1.1156 of the Commission's rules. 47 CFR  1.1152 through 1.1156. II. Background 4. Section 9(a) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, authorizes the Commission to assess and collect annual regulatory fees to recover the costs, as determined annually by Congress, that it incurs in carrying out enforcement, policy and rulemaking, international, and user information activities. 47 U.S.C. 159(a). See Attachment I for a description of feeable activities. In our FY 1994 Fee Report and Order, 59 FR 30984 (June 16, 1994), we adopted the Schedule of Regulatory Fees that Congress established and we prescribed rules to govern payment of the fees, as required by Congress. 47 U.S.C.  159(b), (f)(1). Subsequently, in our FY 1995 and FY 1996 Fee Reports and Orders, 60 FR 34004 (June 29, 1995) and 61 FR 36629 (July 12, 1996), we modified the Schedule to increase by approximately 93 percent and 9 percent, respectively, the revenue generated by these fees in accordance with the amounts Congress required us to collect in FY 1995 and FY 1996. Also, in both our FY 1995 and FY 1996 Fee Reports and Orders, we amended certain rules governing our regulatory fee program based upon our experience administering the program in prior years. See 47 CFR  1.1151 et seq. 5. As noted above, for FY 1994 we adopted the Schedule of Regulatory Fees established in Section 9(g) of the Act. For fiscal years after FY 1994, however, Sections 9(b)(2) and (3), respectively, provide for "Mandatory Adjustments" and "Permitted Amendments" to the Schedule of Regulatory Fees. 47 U.S.C.  159(b)(2), (b)(3). Section 9(b)(2), entitled "Mandatory Adjustments," requires that we revise the Schedule of Regulatory Fees whenever Congress changes the amount that we are to recover through regulatory fees. 47 U.S.C.  159(b)(2). 6. Section 9(b)(3), entitled "Permitted Amendments," requires that we determine annually whether adjustments to the fees are warranted based upon the requirements of this subsection and that, whenever we make such adjustments, we take into account factors that are reasonably related to the payer of the fee and factors that are in the public interest. In making these amendments, we are to "add, delete, or reclassify services in the Schedule to reflect additions, deletions or changes in the nature of its services." 47 U.S.C.  159(b)(3). 7. Section 9(i) requires that we develop accounting systems necessary to adjust our fees pursuant to changes in the costs of regulation of the various services subject to a fee and for other purposes. 47 U.S.C.  9(i). In this proceeding, we are proposing for the first time to rely on cost accounting data to identify our regulatory costs and to develop our FY 1997 fees based upon these costs. Also, as noted, we are proposing to limit the increase in the amount of the fee for any service in order to phase in our reliance on cost-based fees for those services whose proposed revenue requirement would be more than 25 percent above the revenue requirement which would have resulted from the "mandatory adjustments" to the FY 1996 fees without incorporation of costs. The methodology we propose enables us to develop regulatory fees which more closely reflect our costs of regulating a service and also allows us to make annual revisions to our fees based to the fullest extent possible, and consistent with the public interest, on the actual costs of regulating those services subject to a fee. Finally, Section 9(b)(4)(B) requires that we notify Congress of any permitted amendments 90 days before those amendments go into effect. 47 U.S.C.  159(b)(4)(B). III. Discussion A. Summary of FY 1997 Fee Methodology 8. As noted above, Congress has required that the Commission recover $152,523,000 for FY 1997 through the collection of regulatory fees, representing the costs applicable to our enforcement, policy and rulemaking, international, and user information activities. 47 U.S.C.  159(a). Congress' increase does not fall equally on all payers due to revised payment units and revenue requirement allocations resulting from the cost accounting system. 9. In developing our proposed FY 1997 fee schedule, we first estimated payment units for FY 1997 in order to determine the aggregate amount of revenue we would collect without any revision to our FY 1996 fees. Next, we compared this revenue amount to the $152,523,000 that Congress has required us to collect in FY 1997 and pro-rated the shortfall among all the existing fee categories. We then adjusted the projected revenue requirements so that they equaled the actual costs of each service, using data generated by our cost accounting system, described infra, to ensure that revenues equaled our regulatory costs for each fee category. 10. We next examined the impact of using actual costs to establish regulatory fees for each class of regulatees to determine whether any regulatees experienced an unduly large fee increase. We found that, in many cases, cost-based fees result in fee payments dramatically higher in FY 1997 than they were in FY 1996. Therefore, rather than proposing fully cost- based fees for FY 1997, we are proposing to phase in full reliance on cost-based fees and, for FY 1997, to establish a revenue ceiling in each service no higher than 25 percent above the revenue that payers within a fee category would have paid if FY 1997 fees had remained at FY 1996 levels adjusted only for changes in volume and the increase required by Congress. Our proposed methodology would reduce fees for services whose regulatory costs have declined while increasing fees for services experiencing higher regulatory costs in order to begin eliminating disparities disclosed by our cost accounting system between a service's current costs and fees ascribed to these services in prior fiscal years. 11. Once we established our tentative FY 1997 fees, we evaluated various proposals made by Commission staff concerning other adjustments to the Fee Schedule and to our collection procedures. The proposals are discussed in Paragraphs 20-40 and are factored into our proposed FY 1997 Schedule of Regulatory Fees, set forth in Attachment F. 12. Finally, we have incorporated, as Attachment H, proposed Guidance containing detailed descriptions of each fee category, information on the individual or entity responsible for paying a particular fee and other critical information designed to assist potential fee payers in determining the extent of their fee liability, if any, for FY 1997. In the following paragraphs, we describe in greater detail our methodology for establishing our FY 1997 regulatory fees. B. Development of FY 1997 Fees 1. Adjustment of Payment Units 13. As the first step in calculating individual service regulatory fees for FY 1997, we adjusted the estimated payment units for each service because payment units for many services have changed substantially since we adopted our FY 1996 fees. We obtained our estimated payment units through a variety of means, including our licensee data bases, actual prior year payment records, and industry and trade group projections. Whenever possible, we verified these estimates from multiple sources to ensure the accuracy of these estimates. Attachment B provides a summary of how revised payment units were determined for each fee category. 2. Calculation of Revenue Requirements 14. We next multiplied the revised payment units for each service by our FY 1996 fee amounts in each fee category to determine how much revenue we would collect without any change to the existing Schedule of Regulatory Fees. The amount of revenue we would collect is approximately $136.5 million. This amount is approximately $16.0 million less than the amount the Commission is required to collect in FY 1997. We then adjusted these revenue requirements for each fee category on a proportional basis, consistent with Section 9(b)(2) of the Act, to obtain an estimate of revenue requirements for each fee category at the $152,523,000 level required by Congress for FY 1997. Attachment C provides detailed calculations showing how we determined the revised revenue amount for each service. 3. Calculation of Regulatory Costs 15. On October 1, 1995, the Commission established, in accordance with 47 U.S.C.  159(i), a cost accounting system designed, in part, to provide us with useful data, in combination with other information, to help ensure that fees closely reflected our actual costs of regulation. The Commission's cost accounting system, which is integrated with our personnel/payroll system to ensure accuracy and timeliness of cost information, accumulates both personnel and non- personnel costs on a service-by-service basis. 16. In order to utilize actual costs for fee development purposes, we first had to add indirect support costs to the direct costs and then adjust the results to approximate the amount of revenue that Congress requires us to collect in FY 1997 ($152,523,000). Thus, we adjusted the actual cost data pertaining to regulatory fee activities recorded for the period October 1, 1995 through September 30, 1996 proportionally among the fee categories so that total costs approximated $152,523,000. For fee categories where fees are further differentiated by class or market (e.g., Markets 1-10 under the general VHF and UHF Commercial Television fee category), we distributed the costs to the class or market group by maintaining the same ratios between the classes or market groups as between the fees in the FY 1996 schedule. The results of these calculations are shown in detail in Attachment D and represent our best estimate of actual total attributable costs relative to each fee category for FY 1997. 4. Establishment of 25% Revenue Ceiling 17. Our next step was to determine whether reliance on actual costs to develop FY 1997 regulatory fees would result in fees which are too disparate from corresponding FY 1996 fees. As a result of this analysis, we are proposing to establish a ceiling of 25 percent on the increase in the revenue requirement of any service over and above the Congressionally mandated increase in the overall revenue requirement and the difference in unit counts. Because Congress has increased our overall fee collection requirement, we are already required to collect substantially more than we collected in FY 1996. Nevertheless, capping each service's revenue requirement at no more than a 25 percent increase enables us to begin the process of reducing fees for services with lower costs and increasing fees for services with higher costs in order to close the gap between actual costs and fees designed to recover these costs. We are not suggesting that fee increases be limited to a 25 percent increase over the FY 1996 fees. The 25 percent increase is over and above the revenue which would be required after adjusting for the projected FY 1997 payment units and the proportional share of the 21 percent increase in the amount that Congress requires us to collect. Thus, FY 1997 fees may increase more than 25 percent over FY 1996 fees depending upon the number of payment units. 18. An important consideration in proposing the establishment of a revenue ceiling is the impact on other fee payers. Because the Commission is required to collect a full $152,523,000 in FY 1997 regulatory fees, the additional revenue ($28,024,533) that would have been collected from classes of licensees subject to the revenue ceiling had there been no ceiling, needs to be collected instead from licensees not subject to the ceiling. This results in a certain amount of subsidization between fee payer classes. We believe, however, that the public interest is best served by adopting our proposed revenue ceiling methodology. To do otherwise would subject several entities to unexpected major increases which would severely impact the economic well being of certain licensees who will not be able to adjust their business plans accordingly. Attachment E displays the step-by-step process we used to calculate adjusted revenue requirements for each fee category for FY 1997, including the reallocation of revenue requirements resulting from the application of our proposed revenue ceilings. We invite comments on our proposed methodology to incorporate actual costs into the computation of regulatory fees and to establish the 25 % revenue ceiling. 5. Recalculation Of Fees 19. Once we determined the amount of fee revenue necessary to collect from each class of licensee, we divided the revenue requirement by the number of payment units (and by the license term, if applicable, for "small" fees) to obtain actual fee amounts for each fee category. These calculated fee amounts were then rounded in accordance with Section 9(b)(3) of the Act. See Attachment E. 6. Other Proposed Change--Consolidation of Private Microwave & Domestic Public Fixed Fee Categories 20. We examined the results of our calculations made in Paragraphs 15-19 to determine if further adjustments of the fees and/or changes to payment procedures were warranted based upon the public interest and other criteria established in 47 U.S.C. 159(b)(3). As a result of this review, we are proposing the following change to our Fee Schedule: 21. In our FY 1994, FY 1995 and FY 1996 fee schedules, Private Microwave licensees were required to pay a "small" regulatory fee, in advance, for the entire license term at the time of application. In contrast, the Domestic Public Fixed category was considered a "large" regulatory fee subject to an annual payment. The domestic public fixed category is comprised of several commercial microwave services; e.g., microwave multiple address, microwave common carrier fixed, microwave digital electronic message, and microwave local TV transmission. 22. Since inception of the regulatory fee program, many parties holding microwave licenses have expressed confusion concerning which fee they are required to pay. In order to alleviate this confusion and because operational and technical characteristics of private microwave and commercial microwave systems are similar, we are proposing to combine these two fee categories into a single Microwave category for FY 1997. 23. Accordingly, we are proposing to adjust the anticipated number of payment units and combine the revenue requirements for the Private Microwave and Domestic Public Fixed categories and establish a "small" fee, payable in advance for the entire license term, for the new consolidated Microwave category. The annual regulatory fee for all microwave licensees would be $10 per license. This new fee was calculated as follows: (a) From Attachments C and E: (1) 5,350 private microwave stations (units) (Revenue requirement = $523,083) (2) 18,845 commercial microwave/public fixed stations (units) (Revenue requirement = $118,026) (b) Converting from annual payment ("large fee") to license term payment ("small fee"): (1) 18,845 commercial microwave units divided by 10 year license term = 1,885 commercial microwave units to be licensed each year. (c) Calculation of new microwave fee: The sum of the two revenue requirements divided by the sum of the units to be licensed and divided by the license term as follows: (1) (($523,083 + $118,026) divided by (5,350 + 1,885)) divided by 10 years = $8.86 (d) Round fee to the nearest $5 = $10 (47 U.S.C  159(b)(2)) 24. We invite comments on our proposal to combine the Private Microwave and Domestic Public Fixed (Commercial Microwave) service categories for regulatory fee purposes into a single Microwave category and to establish an appropriate "small" fee for this single category. 7. Effect of Revenue Redistributions on Major Constituencies 25. The chart below illustrates the relative percentages of the revenue requirements borne by the major constituencies since inception of regulatory fees in FY 1994. REVENUE REQUIREMENT PERCENTAGES BY CONSTITUENCIES FY 1994(Actual) FY 1995 (Actual) FY 1996 (Actual) FY 1997 (Proposed) Cable TV Operators (Inc. CARS Licenses) 41.36 24.02 28.19 23.74 Broadcast Licensees 23.84 13.76 14.77 14.96 Satellite Operators (Inc. Earth Stations) 3.32 3.62 4.28 4.28 Common Carriers 25.01 44.52 45.54 46.27 Wireless Licensees 6.47 14.07 7.23 10.75 TOTAL 100.00 99.99 100.01 100.00 C. Other Issues 1. Commercial AM/FM Radio 26. In November 1996 the Commission released a Notice of Inquiry to determine if, in FY 1997, it is feasible to utilize a methodology based on market size and class of station to assess annual regulatory fees upon licensees of commercial AM and FM broadcast radio stations. We invited interested parties to comment upon a methodology proposed by the Montana Broadcasters Association (Montana), or to propose any other methodology for assessing AM and FM fees they believe would serve the public interest. See Amendment of Part 1 of the Commission's Rules Pertaining to the Schedule of Annual Regulatory Fees for Mass Media Services, FCC 96-422, released November 6, 1996, 61 FR 59397 (November 22, 1996). 27. In establishing our regulatory fee program, we recognized that Congress had required the Commission to adopt the Schedule of Regulatory Fees for FY 1994 contained in Section 9(g) of the Communications Act, as amended. 47 U.S.C.  159(g). The Schedule assessed AM and FM radio fees based upon class of station. Thus, each licensee paid a fee identical to other licensees with the same class of station, without regard to the size or population of its service area. See Implementation of Section 9 of the Communications Act, 9 FCC Rcd 5333, 5339 (1994), 59 FR 30984 (June 16, 1994). We declined to consider any revision to the fee schedule for FY 1994, but we invited interested parties to propose alternative methodologies for various services subject to the regulatory fees, including AM and FM radio, for consideration in our proceeding to adopt the FY 1995 Schedule of Regulatory Fees. 9 FCC Rcd 5360. Subsequently, in our NPRM proposing fees for FY 1995, we recognized that "population density of a [AM or FM] station's geographic location was also a public interest factor warranting recognition in the fee schedule." Therefore, we proposed for consideration by interested parties a methodology incorporating market size in the calculation of AM and FM fees, by assessing higher fees for radio stations located in Arbitron Rating Co. (Arbitron) designated markets. We proposed a two-tiered fee schedule with stations in Arbitron rated markets paying higher fees than the same classes of stations located in smaller, non-Arbitron rated markets. See Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in the Matter of Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 1995, MD Docket No. 95-3, FCC 95-14, released January 12, 1995 at Paragraph 29. In our Report and Order establishing our FY 1995 fees, we declined to adopt this proposed method because, after consideration of the public comments, we found that it did not provide a "sufficiently accurate and equitable methodology for determining fees." See Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 1995, 10 FCC Rcd 13512, 13531-32 (1996), 60 FR 34004 (June 29, 1995). 28. In our Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to establish regulatory fees for FY 1996, we stated, with regard to the fees for AM and FM radio stations, that we "were particularly interested in a proposal which would associate population density and service area contours with license data" and we again requested interested parties to propose viable alternative methodologies for assessment of AM and FM fees. Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 1996, FCC 96-153, at Paragraphs 20-21 (April 9, 1996), 61 FR 16432 (April 15, 1996). In response, Montana filed comments proposing an AM and FM fee structure based on class of station and on market size. We received no comments addressing Montana's proposal. However, following our own review of the proposal, we decided not to take any action until we had an opportunity to evaluate more extensively the impact of Montana's proposal on AM and FM licensees through a Notice of Inquiry. Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 1996, FCC 96-295, at Paragraphs 23-29, July 5, 1996, 61 FR 36629 (July 12, 1996). 29. Montana's proposed methodology utilizes broad groupings of radio markets determined by Arbitron market size, with the fee for each market grouping predicated on the ratios that Congress initially established in Section 9(g) of the Act (47 U.S.C.  159(g)) for assessing fees for licensees of television stations serving different sized markets. Montana proposed four specific radio market classifications: Markets 1-25; Markets 26-50; Markets 51-100; and Remaining Markets. Montana's proposal assigned stations to each market grouping based upon Arbitron television market designations and relied on an analysis of broadcast markets prepared by Dataworld MediaXpert Service ("Dataworld"), which grouped radio stations by class of station within a particular market size. It then calculated the fees for stations in different markets utilizing the ratios between the fees for television markets in Section 9(g). Montana argued that its proposal was more equitable than the groupings based on class of station relied on by the Commission because, under its proposal, stations in smaller markets would pay lower fees than stations serving more populous markets. 30. In order to collect the total aggregate fees to be recovered from AM and FM radio stations as proposed in the FY 1995 NPRM, Montana's proposed methodology would have allocated fees among radio stations as follows: Markets AM Class A AM Class B AM Class C AM Class D FM Class I FM Class II 1-25 $2,890 $1,710 $645 $815 $2,890 $1,940 26-50 $2,040 $1,140 $455 $575 $2,040 $1,370 51-100 $1,360 $760 $305 $385 $1,360 $910 Remaining $850 $475 $190 $240 $850 $570 31. However, subsequent to the filing of Montana's proposal, Congress increased the aggregate amount of fees to be recovered by the Commission and amended the Commission's regulatory fee schedule for television stations to increase the fees paid by licensees in larger markets and to reduce the fees paid by licensees located in Markets 51-100 and the Remaining Markets. Public Law 104-134. See Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 1996, supra at Paragraph 14. This substantially changed the ratios between the fees for television stations in different sized markets used by Montana to compute its proposed radio fees. Substituting the actual ratios between the regulatory fees for television stations in different sized markets for the old ratios utilized in Montana's proposal would have produced the following radio fees for FY 1996: Markets AM Class A AM Class B AM Class C AM Class D FM Class I FM Class II 1-25 $11,500 $6,325 $2,575 $3,150 $4,875 $3,250 26-50 $6,675 $3,675 $1,500 $1,850 $2,850 $1,900 51-100 $3,550 $1,975 $800 $980 $1,525 $1,000 Remaining $1,000 $555 $225 $275 $430 $285 32. The above fees illustrate the impact of the Montana proposal when the changes mandated by Congress to the Regulatory Fee Schedule are considered. We are particularly concerned about the size of the increases in larger markets which, in addition to having more potential listeners, have greater concentrations of stations, thereby increasing the competition for listeners in those markets. Moreover, the accuracy of both sets of calculations are predicated on assumptions that the total aggregate amount of fees to be collected remains unchanged, that the revenue requirement allocated to all broadcast licensees remains unchanged, and that there are no changes in the numbers and classes of licensees subject to broadcast fees. The calculations presented herein are illustrative only, because the fees are predicated on assumptions that will not recur in FY 1997. A change in any or all three of these factors would result in individual fees different than those illustrated in Paragraphs 30 and 31. 33. In response to the NOI, the National Association of Broadcasters ("NAB") submitted a proposed fee table for AM and FM radio stations relying on a database prepared by Dataworld. NAB states that Dataworld developed its database by using the engineering specifications for every operating AM and FM radio station to calculate the populations served by those stations using 1990 census information. Under NAB's proposal, stations with more powerful signals would generally pay higher fees because they usually serve more people than stations with weaker signals. NAB maintains that a fee schedule based on the Dataworld information would equitably allocate fees among all stations. 34. In support of its proposal, NAB notes that Congress has recognized the importance of service classes in the fee schedule it enacted in Section 9(g) of the Act, and that there are significant differences in the value and revenue potential of stations in different classes. 47 U.S.C.  159(g). Thus, NAB contends that radio station fees should not be calculated on the basis of predicted audience alone. Moreover, NAB recognizes that Dataworld's data does not reflect population changes since 1990 and that, in certain instances, there will be discrepancies between the Dataworld calculations and some stations' actual engineering characteristics. Thus, NAB proposes fees based on the estimate of population served and the class of station rather than strictly on the basis of population served. 35. The proposed NAB fee table includes 24 fee levels for AM and 12 fee levels for FM. NAB's proposed fee table would collect $6,104,196 from FM licensees and $2,235,956 from AM licensees, as follows: Population Served AM Class A AM Class B AM Class C AM Class D <= 100,000 $325 $260 $125 $165 100,001 - 250,000 $375 $325 $175 $225 250,001 - 500,000 $575 $450 $250 $325 500,001 - 1,500,000 $975 $650 $325 $425 1,500,001 - 3,000,000 $1,500 $950 $450 $575 > 3,000,000 $1,800 $1,300 $650 $750 Population Served FM Classes A, B1, C3 FM Classes B, C, C1, C2 <= 40,000 $300 $450 40,001 - 100,000 $450 $925 100,001 - 250,000 $925 $1,350 250,001 - 750,000 $1,150 $1,750 750,001 - 1,750,000 $1,300 $2,000 > 1,750,000 $1,650 $2,750 36. While the NAB proposal has merit, further study and refinement of its methodology is required. First, we note that the NAB proposal increases fees based on the average increase in the amount that Congress has required us to collect for FY 1997 without taking into account our cost of regulation of AM and FM stations as measured by our cost accounting system. As a result, its proposal would fail to raise sufficient revenue to cover the pro rata share of the Commission's revenue requirements for AM and FM radio. Moreover, NAB's proposal does not disclose the number of stations in each of its payment categories so that its proposal can be modified to meet our revenue requirements, there are discrepancies between our estimate of the number of stations and the number of stations included in Dataworld's database, and it is not clear whether the Dataworld station count includes government and non-commercial stations which are exempt from regulatory fee requirements. In addition, NAB has not presented an explanation or rationale for its specific fee classifications. Nor is there sufficient information to permit the Commission to determine how NAB's proposed fee table can be modified to cover changes in station characteristics and populations. If we were to adopt NAB's proposal, we would also be required to develop a methodology for advising each individual station of its fee based on our estimate of the population in its service area. 37. Thus, while the Montana and NAB proposals hold the promise of a more equitable fee schedule, there are problems with these proposals that must be addressed before they can be relied on to develop a revised fee schedule for AM and FM radio. Therefore, interested parties are invited to comment not only on both the NAB and Montana proposals, but also on any alternative methods for assessing radio station fees. Parties who have filed comments on the NOI need not duplicate them in this proceeding. Comments are also invited with respect to the revised schedule for AM and FM radio stations set forth in Attachment F based on the general methodology for calculating FY 1997 fees. 2. Personal Communications Service (PCS) 38. Our FY 1996 Report and Order deferred assessing a regulatory fee upon licensees in the Personal Communications Service ("PCS") in FY 1996 because the service was in a very early start-up phase. See FY 1996 Report and Order at Appendix F, Paragraph 15. We now believe that there are sufficient operational PCS systems to justify their inclusion among those licensees who are assessed fees in the CMRS Mobile Services and CMRS One-Way Paging fee categories for FY 1997. We have therefore incorporated fees for PCS in Paragraphs 14 and 15 of Attachment H. 3. Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) 39. In our FY 1996 Report and Order at Paragraph 22, we discussed a proposal offered by Destineer, Inc., a PCS licensee, that we establish a CMRS Messaging Service fee category to replace our CMRS One-Way Paging fee category. Destineer stated that, with the exception of two-way paging services, our CMRS Mobile Services fee category includes only broadband services which provide two-way interactive voice communications. Destineer recommended establishing a CMRS Messaging Service to include all narrowband services, including two- way paging services. We invite interested parties to file comments on Destineer's proposal or propose alternative methods to assess CMRS fees for FY 1997. We are particularly interested in the number of estimated units associated with an alternative proposal and the impact the proposed changes would have on projected revenues. 4. Intelsat & Inmarsat Signatories 40. The Commission incurs regulatory costs for satellite policy and rulemaking, enforcement and user information activities. As directed by Congress, these costs must be recovered through the collection of regulatory fees. In accordance with the provisions of Section 9, the Commission's overall goal is to recover all of the costs associated with satellite regulatory activities and to distribute these costs fairly amongst fee payers, taking into account factors reasonably related to the benefits provided by the payer, and "other factors we determine are necessary in the public interest." 41. In FY 1994 and FY 1995 the Commission recovered satellite regulatory costs by collecting fees from satellite earth station and geosynchronous space station regulatees (Part 25) only. Satellite providers using international bearer circuits to provide service were assessed a separate fee under the International Bearer Circuits category in order to recover the regulatory costs associated with international telecommunications policy and rulemaking, enforcement and user information activities. The Commission received comments during both years' regulatory fees proceedings concerning the distribution of the burden of costs. In an effort to explore alternative methods of fee collection the Commission conducted focus group sessions in FY 1995 which were attended by satellite industry representatives . One of the major issues raised was a perceived inequity in the distribution of the total satellite regulatory fee burden. Commission activities associated with Intelsat, Inmarsat and the U.S. signatory to both were identified as areas where space and earth station regulatees were unfairly bearing the regulatory fee burden. 42. In response to distribution issues raised in the focus group sessions and comments filed in previous years, we examined satellite regulatory activities and determined that since the Commission incurs regulatory costs associated with Signatory-related activities, a regulatory fee for Signatories was the proper vehicle for recovering these costs. In its comments on the proposed FY l996 fees, Comsat challenged the Commission's proposal regarding the Signatory fee, contending that it would be unlawful and excessive. Each of these arguments was discussed in our FY l996 Report and Order, in which we adopted the Signatory fee. However, in Paragraph 47 of the FY 1996 Report and Order, we indicated our intent to explore alternative means of recovering these costs and to seek public comment on such alternatives. We therefore request interested parties to comment on alternative methods of collecting costs associated with Signatories. We request that comments specify whether other regulatees should be assessed a portion of the fee applicable to the signatory category, and, if so, the estimated percentage of the fee that should be assessed upon other regulatees. We are particularly interested in ways to recover our costs without unfairly burdening other regulatees. If no specific alternative is identified, we propose to retain the current Signatory fee category for FY 1997. 5. Non-Common Carrier International Bearer Circuits 43. International bearer circuit fees are currently assessed upon domestic and international common carriers only. In its comments responding to proposals contained in our FY 1996 NPRM, Comsat contended that payment of international bearer circuit fees should be expanded to non-common carriers providing international services. See FY 1996 Report and Order at Paragraph 65. In our FY 1996 Report and Order we declined to expand collection of international bearer circuit fees to non-common carriers. As we noted at that time, the Commission is unable, due to lack of appropriate data, to calculate a fee applicable to bearer circuits provided directly to end users over non-common carrier domestic and international facilities. The foregoing situation has not changed. We, therefore, are proposing to assess the international bearer circuit fee only on domestic and international common carriers in FY 1997. However, we invite interested parties to comment on Comsat's proposal. We are especially interested in information concerning the number of bearer circuits provided directly to end users over non-common carrier domestic and international facilities. D. Procedures for Payment of Regulatory Fees 44. Generally, we propose to retain the procedures that we have established for the payment of regulatory fees. Section 9(f) requires that we permit "payment by installments in the case of fees in large amounts, and in the case of small amounts, shall require the payment of the fee in advance for a number of years not to exceed the term of the license held by the payer." See 47 U.S.C.  159(f)(1). Consistent with Section 9(f), we are again establishing three categories of fee payments, based upon the category of service for which the fee payment is due and the amount of the fee to be paid. The fee categories are (1) "standard" fees, (2) "large" fees, and (3) "small" fees. 1. Annual Payments of Standard Fees 45. Standard fees are those regulatory fees that are payable in full on an annual basis. Payers of standard fees are not required to make advance payments for their full license term and are not eligible for installment payments. All standard fees are payable in full on the date we establish for payment of fees in their regulatory fee category. The payment dates for each regulatory fee category will be announced either in the Report and Order in this proceeding or by public notice in the Federal Register following the termination of this proceeding. 2. Installment Payments for Large Fees 46. While we are mindful that time constraints may preclude an opportunity for installment payments, we propose that regulatees in any category of service with a liability of $12,000 or more be eligible to make installment payments and that eligibility for installment payments be based upon the amount of either a single regulatory fee payment or combination of fee payments by the same licensee or regulatee. We propose that regulatees eligible to make installment payments may submit their required fees in two equal payments (on dates to be announced) or, in the alternative, in a single payment on the date that their final installment payment is due. Due to statutory constraints concerning notification to Congress prior to actual collection of the fees, however, it is unlikely that there will be sufficient time for installment payments, and that regulatees eligible to make installment payments will be required to pay these fees on the last date that fee payments may be submitted. The dates for installment payments, or a single payment, will be announced either in the Report and Orderterminating this proceeding or by public notice published pursuant to delegated authority in the Federal Register. 3. Advance Payments of Small Fees 47. As we have in the past, we are proposing to treat regulatory fee payments by certain licensees as "small" fees subject to advance payment consistent with the requirements of Section 9(f)(2). Advance payments will be required from licensees of those services that we decided would be subject to advance payments in our FY 1994 Report and Order, and to those additional payers set forth herein. Payers of advance fees will submit the entire fee due for the full term of their licenses when filing their initial, renewal, or reinstatement application. Regulatees subject to a payment of small fees shall pay the amount due for the current fiscal year multiplied by the number of years in the term of their requested license. In the event that the required fee is adjusted following their payment of the fee, the payer would not be subject to the payment of a new fee until filing an application for renewal or reinstatement of the license. Thus, payment for the full license term would be made based upon the regulatory fee applicable at the time the application is filed. The effective date for payment of small fees established in this proceeding will be announced in our Report and Order terminating this proceeding or by public notice published pursuant to delegated authority in the Federal Register. 4. Minimum Fee Payment Liability 48. Regulatees whose total fee liability, including all categories of fees for which payment is due by an entity, amounts to less than $10 are exempted from fee payment in FY 1997. 5. Standard Fee Calculations and Payment Dates 49. As noted, the time for payment of standard fees and any installment payments will be published in the Federal Register pursuant to delegated authority. For licensees, permittees and holders of other authorizations in the Common Carrier, Mass Media, and Cable Services whose fees are not based on a subscriber, unit, or circuit count, fees should be submitted for any authorization held as of October 1, 1996. October 1 is the date to be used for establishing liability for payment of standard fees since it is the first day of the federal government's fiscal year. 50. In the case of regulatees whose fees are based upon a subscriber, unit or circuit count, the number of a regulatees' subscribers, units or circuits on December 31, 1996, will be used to calculate the fee payment. We have selected the last date of the calendar year because many of these entities file reports with us as of that date. Others calculate their subscriber numbers as of that date for internal purposes. Therefore, calculation of the regulatory fee as of that date will facilitate both an entity's computation of its fee payment and our verification that the correct fee payment has been submitted. E. Schedule of Regulatory Fees 51. The Commission's proposed Schedule of Regulatory Fees for FY 1997 is contained in Attachment F of this NPRM. IV. Procedural Matters A. Comment Period and Procedures 52. Pursuant to procedures set forth in Sections 1.415 and 1.419 of the Commission's rules, interested parties may file comments on or before March 25, 1997, and reply comments on or before April 4, 1997. All relevant comments will be considered by the Commission before final action is taken in this proceeding. To file formally in this proceeding, participants must file an original and four copies of all comments, reply comments and supporting materials. If participants want each Commissioner to receive a personal copy of their comments, an original and nine copies must be filed. Comments and reply comments should be sent to the Office of the Secretary, Federal Communications Commission, Washington, D.C. 20554. Interested parties, who do not wish to formally participate in this proceeding, may file informal comments at the same address. Comments and reply comments will be available for public inspection during regular business hours in the FCC Reference Center (Room 239) of the Federal Communications Commission, 1919 M Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20054. B. Ex Parte Rules 53. This is a non-restricted notice and comment rulemaking proceeding. Ex partepresentations are permitted, except during the Sunshine Agenda period, provided they are disclosed pursuant to the Commission's rules. See 47 CFR  1.1202, 1.1203 and 1026(a). C. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis 54. As required by section 603 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (Public Law 96-354, 94 Stat. 1165, 5 U.S.C.  601 et seq. (1981)), the Commission has prepared an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) of the expected impact on small entities of the proposals suggested in this document. The IRFA is set forth in Attachment A. Written public comments are requested with respect to the IRFA. These comments must be filed in accordance with the same filing deadlines for comments on the rest of the NPRM, but they must have a separate and distinct heading, designating the comments as responses to the IRFA. The Secretary shall send a copy of this NPRM , including the IRFA, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration in accordance with section 603(a) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act. D. Paperwork Reduction Act Compliance 55. The Federal Communications Commission, as part of its continuing effort to reduce paperwork burden, invites the general public and other Federal agencies to take this opportunity to comment on the following proposed and/or continuing information collections, as required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 104-13. Comments are requested concerning (a) whether the proposed collection of information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the Commission, including whether the information shall have practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the Commission's burden estimates; (c) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information collected, and (d) ways to minimize the burden of the collection of information on the respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of information technology. 56. Written comments should be submitted on or before May 9, 1997. If you anticipate that you will be submitting comments, but find it difficult to do so within the period of time allowed by this notice, you should advise the contact listed below as soon as possible. 57. Direct all comments to Dorothy Conway, Federal Communications Commission, Room 234, 1919 M St., N.W., Washington, DC 20554 or via internet to dconway@fcc.gov, and Timothy Fain, OMB Desk Officer, 10236 NEOB, 725 17th St., N.W. Washington, DC 20503 or via internet to fain_t@a1.eop.gov. 58. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For additional information or copies of the information collections, contact Dorothy Conway at 202-418-0217 or via internet at dconway@fcc.gov. OMB Approval Number: (Number should be included if it is a revision to an existing collection) Title: Form No.: Type of Review: (i.e. new collection, revision of existing collection) Respondents: Number of Respondents: Estimated Time Per Response: Total Annual Burden: Needs and Uses: (Brief description of how the information will be used) E. Authority and Further Information 59. Authority for this proceeding is contained in sections 4(i) and (j), 9, and 303(r) of the Communications Act of 1934 as amended, 47 U.S.C.  154(1) and (j) and 159 and 303(r). 60. Further information about this proceeding may be obtained by contacting the Fees Hotline at (202) 418-0192. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION William F. Caton Acting Secretary Attachment A INITIAL REGULATORY FLEXIBILITY ANALYSIS 1. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), as amended by the Contract with America Advancement Act (CWAAA), Public Law 104-121, 110 Stat. 847 (1996), the Commission has prepared an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) of the expected significant economic impact on small entities by the policies and rules proposed in this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking In the Matter of Assessment and Collection of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 1997. Written public comments are requested on the IRFA. Comments must be identified as responses to the IRFA and must be filed by the deadlines for comments on the NPRM provided above in Paragraph 52. I. Need for and Objectives of the Proposed Rule: 2. This rulemaking proceeding is initiated to obtain comments concerning the Commission's proposed amendment of its Schedule of Regulatory Fees in order to collect regulatory fees in the amount of $152,523,000, the amount that Congress has required the Commission to recover through regulatory fees in Fiscal Year 1997. The Commission seeks to collect the necessary amount through its proposed revised regulatory fees, as contained in the attached Schedule of Regulatory Fees, in the most efficient manner possible and without undue burden to the public. II. Legal Basis: 3. The proposed action is authorized under Sections (4)(i) and (j), 9 and 303(r) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C.  154(i) and (j), 159, and 303(r). III. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities To Which the Proposed Rule Will Apply: 4. The RFA generally defines "small entity " as having the same meaning as the terms "small business," "small organization," and "small governmental jurisdiction" and "the same meaning as the term 'small business concern' under the Small Business Act unless the Commission has developed one or more definitions that are appropriate for its activities. A small business concern is one which: (1) is independently owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of operation; and (3) satisfies any additional criteria established by the Small Business Administration (SBA). The Small Business Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA) provision of the RFA also applies to nonprofit organizations and to governmental organizations such as governments of cities, counties, towns, townships, villages, school districts, or special districts with populations of less than 50,000. There are 85,006 governmental entities in the United States. 5 U.S.C.  601(3) (incorporating by reference the definition of "small business concern" in 15 U.S.C.  632). Pursuant to 5 U.S.C.  601(3), the statutory definition of a small business applies "unless an agency after consultation with the Office of Advocacy of the Small Business Administration and after opportunity for public comment, establishes one or more definitions of such term which are appropriate to the activities of the agency and publishes such definition(s) in the Federal Register." CABLE SERVICES OR SYSTEMS 5. The SBA has developed a definition of small entities for cable and other pay television services, which includes all such companies generating $11 million or less in revenue annually. This definition includes cable systems operators, closed circuit television services, direct broadcast satellite services, multipoint distribution systems, satellite master antenna systems and subscription television services. According to the Census Bureau, there were 1,788 total cable and other pay television services and 1,423 had less than $11 million in revenue. 6. The Commission has developed its own definition of a small cable system operator for the purposes of rate regulation. Under the Commission's rules, a "small cable company," is one serving fewer than 400,000 subscribers nationwide. Based on our most recent information, we estimate that there were 1,439 cable operators that qualified as small cable system operators at the end of 1995. Since then, some of those companies may have grown to serve over 400,000 subscribers, and others may have been involved in transactions that caused them to be combined with other cable operators. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 1,439 small entity cable system operators. 7. The Communications Act also contains a definition of a small cable system operator, which is "a cable operator that, directly or through an affiliate, serves in the aggregate fewer than 1 percent of all subscribers in the United States and is not affiliated with any entity or entities whose gross annual revenues in the aggregate exceed $250,000,000." The Commission has determined that there are 61,700,000 subscribers in the United States. Therefore, we found that an operator serving fewer than 617,000 subscribers shall be deemed a small operator, if its annual revenues, when combined with the total annual revenues of all of its affiliates, do not exceed $250 million in the aggregate. Based on available data, we find that the number of cable operators serving 617,000 subscribers or less totals 1,450. We do not request nor do we collect information concerning whether cable system operators are affiliated with entities whose gross annual revenues exceed $250,000,000, and thus are unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number of cable system operators that would qualify as small cable operators under the definition in the Communications Act. It should be further noted that recent industry estimates project that there will be a total 65,000,000 subcribers, and we have based our fee revenue estimates on that figure. 8. Other Pay Services. Other pay television services are also classified under SIC 4841, which includes cable systems operators, closed circuit television services, direct broadcast satellite services (DBS), multipoint distribution systems (MDS), satellite master antenna systems (SMATV), and subscription television services. COMMON CARRIER SERVICES AND RELATED ENTITIES 9. According to the Telecommunications Industry Revenue: Telecommunications Relay Service Fund Worksheet Data (TRS Worksheet), there are 2,847 interstate carriers. These carriers include, inter alia, local exchange carriers, wireline carriers and service providers, interexchange carriers, competitive access providers, operator service providers, pay telephone operators, providers of telephone toll service, providers of telephone exchange service, and resellers. 10. The SBA has defined a small business for Radiotelephone Communications (SIC 4812) and Telephone Communications, Except Radiotelephone (4813), to be small entities when they have fewer than 1,500 employees. We first discuss generally the total number of small telephone companies falling within both of those SIC categories. Then, we discuss the number of small businesses within the two subcategories, and attempt to refine further those estimates to correspond with the categories of telephone companies that are commonly used under our rules. 11. Because the small incumbent LECs subject to these rules are either dominant in their field of operations or are not independently owned and operated, consistent with our prior practice, they are excluded from the definition of "small entitiy" and "small business concerns." Accordingly, our use of the terms "small entities" and "small businesses" does not encompass small incumbent LECs. Out of an abundance of caution, however, for regulatory flexibility analysis purposes, we will consider small incumbent LECs within this analysis and use the term "small incumbent LECs" to refer to any incumbent LECs that arguably might be defined by the SBA as "small business concerns." 12. Total Number of Telephone Companies Affected. The United States Bureau of the Census ("the Census Bureau") reports that, at the end of 1992, there were 3,497 firms engaged in providing telephone services, as defined therein, for at least one year. This number contains a variety of different categories of carriers, including local exchange carriers, interexchange carriers, competitive access providers, cellular carriers, mobile service carriers, operator service providers, pay telephone operators, personal communications services providers, covered specialized mobile radio providers, and resellers. It seems certain that some of those 3,497 telephone service firms may not qualify as small entities or small incumbent LECs because they are not "independently owned and operated." For example, a PCS provider that is affiliated with an interexchange carrier having more than 1,500 employees would not meet the definition of a small business. It seems reasonable to tentatively conclude that fewer than 3,497 telephone service firms are small entity telephone service firms or small incumbent local exchange carriers. 13. Wireline Carriers and Service Providers. The SBA has developed a definition of small entities for telephone communications companies except radiotelephone (wireless) companies. The Census Bureau reports that, there were 2,321 such telephone companies in operation for at least one year at the end of 1992. According to the SBA's definition, a small business telephone company other than a radiotelephone company is one employing fewer than 1,500 persons. All but 26 of the 2,321 non-radiotelephone companies listed by the Census Bureau were reported to have fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus, even if all 26 of those companies had more than 1,500 employees, there would still be 2,295 non- radiotelephone companies that might qualify as small entities or small incumbent LECs. We do not have information on the number of carriers that are not independently owned and operated, and thus are unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number of wireline carriers and service providers that would qualify as small business concerns under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 2,295 small telephone communications companies other than radiotelephone companies. 14. Local Exchange Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a definition for small providers of local exchange services (LECs). The closest applicable definition under the SBA rules is for telephone communications companies other than radiotelephone (wireless) companies. The most reliable source of information regarding the number of LECs nationwide is the data that we collect annually in connection with the TRS Worksheet. According to our most recent data, 1,347 companies reported that they were engaged in the provision of local exchange services. We do not have information on the number of carriers that are not independently owned and operated, nor what carriers have more than 1,500 employees, and thus are unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number of LECs that would qualify as small business concerns under SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 1,347 small incumbent LECs. 15. Interexchange Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a definition of small entities specifically applicable to providers of interexchange services (IXCs). The closest applicable definition under the SBA rules is for telephone communications companies except radiotelephone (wireless) companies. The most reliable source of information regarding the number of IXCs nationwide is the data that we collect annually in connection with the TRS Worksheet. According to our most recent data, 130 companies reported that they were engaged in the provision of interexchange services. We do not have information on the number of carriers that are not independently owned and operated, nor have more than 1,500 employees, and thus we are unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number of IXCs that would qualify as small business concerns under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 130 small entity IXCs. 16. Competitive Access Providers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a definition of small entities specifically applicable to providers of competitive access services (CAPs). The closest applicable definition under the SBA rules is for telephone communications companies except radiotelephone (wireless) companies. The most reliable source of information regarding the number of CAPs nationwide is the data that we collect annually in connection with the TRS Worksheet. According to our most recent data, 57 companies reported that they were engaged in the provision of competitive access services. We do not have information on the number of carriers that are not independently owned and operated, nor have more than 1,500 employees, and thus are unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number of CAPs that would qualify as small business concerns under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 57 small CAPs. 17. Operator Service Providers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a definition of small entities specifically applicable to providers of operator services. The closest applicable definition under the SBA rules is for telephone communications companies except radiotelephone (wireless) companies. The most reliable source of information regarding the number of operator service providers nationwide is the data that we collect annually in connection with the TRS Worksheet. According to our most recent data, 25 companies reported that they were engaged in the provision of operator services. We do not have information on the number of carriers that are not independently owned and operated, nor have more than 1,500 employees, and thus are unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number of operator service providers that would qualify as small business concerns under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 25 small operator service providers. 18. Pay Telephone Operators. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a definition of small entities specifically applicable to pay telephone operators. The closest applicable definition under SBA rules is for telephone communications companies except radiotelephone (wireless) companies. The most reliable source of information regarding the number of pay telephone operators nationwide is the data that we collect annually in connection with the TRS Worksheet. According to our most recent data, 271 companies reported that they were engaged in the provision of pay telephone services. We do not have information on the number of carriers that are not independently owned and operated, nor have more than 1,500 employees, and thus are unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number of pay telephone operators that would qualify as small business concerns under SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 271 small pay telephone operators. 19. Resellers (including debit card providers). Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a definition of small entities specifically applicable to resellers. The closest applicable SBA definition for a reseller is a telephone communications company except radiotelephone (wireless) companies. However, the most reliable source of information regarding the number of resellers nationwide is the data that the Commission collects annually in connection with the TRS Worksheet. According to our most recent data, 260companies reported that they were engaged in the resale of telephone service. We do not have information on the number of carriers that are not independently owned and operated, nor have more than 1,500 employees, and thus we are unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number of resellers that would qualify as small entities or small incumbent LEC concerns under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 260 small entity resellers. 20. 800 Subscribers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a definition of small entities specifically applicable to 800 subscribers. The most reliable source of information regarding the number of 800 subscribers is data we collect on the number of 800 numbers in use. According to our most recent data, at the end of 1995, the number of 800 numbers in use was 6,987,063. We do not have information on the number of carriers not independently owned and operated, nor have more than 1,500 employees, and thus are unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number of 800 subscribers that would qualify as small business concerns under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 6,987,063 small entity 800 subscribers. INTERNATIONAL SERVICES 21. The Commission has not developed a definition of small entities applicable to licensees in the international services. Therefore, the applicable definition of small entity is the definition under the SBA rules applicable to Communications Services, Not Elsewhere Classified (NEC). This definition provides that a small entity is expressed as one with $11.0 million or less in annual receipts. According to the Census Bureau, there were a total of 848 communications services, NEC in operation in 1992, and a total of 775 had annual receipts of less than $9,999 million. The Census report does not provide more precise data. 22. International Broadcast Stations. Commission records show that there are 20 international broadcast station licensees. We do not request nor collect annual revenue information, and thus are unable to estimate the number of international broadcast licensees that would constitute a small business under the SBA definition. However, the Commission estimates that only six international broadcast stations are subject to regulatory fee payments. 23. International Public Fixed Radio (Public and Control Stations). There are 15 licensees in this service. We do not request nor collect annual revenue information, and thus are unable to estimate the number of international broadcast licensees that would constitute a small business under the SBA definition. 24. Fixed Satellite Transmit/Receive Earth Stations. There are approximately 4200 earth station authorizations, a portion of which are Fixed Satellite Transmit/Receive Earth Stations. We do not request nor collect annual revenue information, and thus are unable to estimate the number of the earth stations that would constitute a small business under the SBA definition. 25. Fixed Satellite Small Transmit/Receive Earth Stations. There are 4200 earth station authorizations, a portion of which are Fixed Satellite Small Transmit/Receive Earth Stations. We do not request nor collect annual revenue information, and thus are unable to estimate the number of fixed satellite transmit/receive earth stations may constitute a small business under the SBA definition. 26. Fixed Satellite Very Small Aperture Terminal (VSAT) Systems. These stations operate on a primary basis, and frequency coordination with terrestrial microwave systems is not required. Thus, a single "blanket" application may be filed for a specified number of small antennas and one or more hub stations. The Commission has processed 377 applications. We do not request nor collect annual revenue information, and thus are unable to estimate of the number of VSAT systems that would constitute a small business under the SBA definition. 27. Mobile Satellite Earth Stations. There are two licensees. We do not request nor collect annual revenue information, and thus are unable to estimate of the number of mobile satellite earth stations that would constitute a small business under the SBA definition. 28. Radio Determination Satellite Earth Stations. There are four licensees. We do not request nor collect annual revenue information, and thus are unable to estimate of the number of radio determination satellite earth stations that would constitute a small business under the SBA definition. 29. Space Stations (Geostationary). Commission records reveal that there are 37 space station licensees. We do not request nor collect annual revenue information, and thus are unable to estimate of the number of geostationary space stations that would constitute a small business under the SBA definition. 30. Space Stations (Non-Geostationary). There are six Non-Geostationary Space Station licensees, of which only one system is operational. We do not request nor collect annual revenue information, and thus are unable to estimate of the number of non-geostationary space stations that would constitute a small business under the SBA definition. 31. Direct Broadcast Satellites. Because DBS provides subscription services, DBS falls within the SBA definition of Cable and Other Pay Television Services (SIC 4841). This definition provides that a small entity is expressed as one with $11.0 million or less in annual receipts. As of December 1996, there were eight DBS licensees. However, the Commission does not collect annual revenue data for DBS and, therefore, is unable to ascertain the number of small DBS licensees that could be impacted by these proposed rules. Although DBS service requires a great investment of capital for operation, we acknowledge that there are several new entrants in this field that may not yet have generated $11 million in annual receipts, and therefore may be categorized as a small business, if independently owned and operated. MASS MEDIA SERVICES 32. Commercial Radio and Television Services. The proposed rules and policies will apply to television broadcasting licensees and radio broadcasting licensees. The SBA defines a television broadcasting station that has $10.5 million or less in annual receipts as a small business. Television broadcasting stations consist of establishments primarily engaged in broadcasting visual programs by television to the public, except cable and other pay television services. Included in this industry are commercial, religious, educational, and other television stations. Also included are establishments primarily engaged in television broadcasting and which produce taped television program materials. Separate establishments primarily engaged in producing taped television program materials are classified under another SIC number. There were 1,509 television stations operating in the nation in 1992. That number has remained fairly constant as indicated by the approximately 1,550 operating television broadcasting stations in the nation as of August, 1996. For 1992, the number of television stations that produced less than $10.0 million in revenue was 1,155 establishments. Only commercial stations are subject to regulatory fees. 33. Additionally, the Small Business Administration defines a radio broadcasting station that has $5 million or less in annual receipts as a small business. A radio broadcasting station is an establishment primarily engaged in broadcasting aural programs by radio to the public. Included in this industry are commercial, religious, educational, and other radio stations. Radio broadcasting stations which primarily are engaged in radio broadcasting and which produce radio program materials are similarly included. However, radio stations which are separate establishments and are primarily engaged in producing radio program material are classified under another SIC number. The 1992 Census indicates that 96 percent (5,861 of 6,127) radio station establishments produced less than $5 million in revenue in 1992. Official Commission records indicate that 11,334 individual radio stations were operating in 1992. As of August 1996, official Commission records indicate that 12,088 radio stations were operating. Only commercial stations are subject to regulatory fees. 34. Thus, the NPRM adopted today will affect approximately 1,550 full power television stations; approximately 1,194 of those stations are considered small businesses, and 12,088 full power radio stations, approximately 11,605 of which are small businesses. These estimates may overstate the number of small entities since the revenue figures on which they are based do not include or aggregate revenues from non-television or non-radio affiliated companies. There are also 1, 954 low power television stations (LPTV). Given the nature of this service, we will presume that all LPTV licensees qualify as small entities under the SBA definition. Alternative Classification of Small Stations 35. An alternative way to classify small radio and television stations is the number of employees. The Commission currently applies a standard based on the number of employees in administering its Equal Employment Opportunity Rule (EEO) for broadcasting. Thus, radio or television stations with fewer than five full-time employees are exempted from certain EEO reporting and record keeping requirements. We estimate that the total number of broadcast stations with 4 or fewer employees is approximately 4,239. Auxiliary, Special Broadcast and other program distribution services 36. This service involves a variety of transmitters, generally used to relay broadcast programming to the public (through translator and booster stations) or within the program distribution chain (from a remote news gathering unit back to the station). The Commission has not developed a definition of small entities applicable to broadcast auxiliary licensees. Therefore, the applicable definition of small entity is the definition under the Small Business Administration (SBA) rules applicable to radio broadcasting stations (SIC 4832) and television broadcasting stations (SIC 4833). 37. There are currently 2,720 FM translators and boosters, 4,952 TV translators. The FCC does not collect financial information on any broadcast facility and the Department of Commerce does not collect financial information on these auxiliary broadcast facilities. We believe, however, that most, if not all, of these auxiliary facilities could be classified as small businesses by themselves. We also recognize that most translators and boosters are owned by a parent station which, in some cases, would be covered by the revenue definition of small business entity discussed above. These stations would likely have annual revenues that exceed the SBA maximum to be designated as a small business (either $5 million for a radio station or $10.5 million for a TV station). Furthermore, they do not meet the Small Business Act's definition of a "small business concern" because they are not independently owned and operated. 38. Multipoint Distribution Service (MDS). This service involves a variety of transmitters, which are used to relay programming to the home or office, similar to that provided by cable television systems. In connection with the 1996 MDS auction the Commission defined small businesses as entities who had annual average gross revenues for the three preceding years not in excess of $40 million. This definition of a small entity in the context of MDS auctions has been approved by the SBA. These stations were licensed prior to implementation of Section 309(j) of the Act. Licenses for new MDS facilities are now awarded to auction winners in Basic Trading Areas (BTAs) and BTA-like areas. The MDS auctions resulted in 67 successful bidders obtaining licensing opportunities for 493 BTAs. Of the 67 auction winners, 61 meet the definition of a small business. There are 1,573 previously authorized and proposed MDS stations currently licensed. Thus, we conclude that there are 1,634 MDS providers that are small businesses as deemed by the SBA and the Commission's auction rules. It is estimated, however, that only 1,145 MDS licensees are subject to regulatory fees and the number which are small businesses is unknown. WIRELESS AND COMMERCIAL MOBILE SERVICES 39. Cellular Licensees. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a definition of small entities applicable to cellular licensees. The closest applicable definition of small entity is the definition under the SBA rules applicable to radiotelephone (wireless) companies (SIC 4812). The most reliable source of information regarding the number of cellular services carriers nationwide of which we are aware appears to be the data that the Commission collects annually in connection with the TRS Worksheet. According to the most recent data, 792 companies reported that they were engaged in the provision of cellular services. Although it seems certain that some of these carriers are not independently owned and operated, or have more than 1,500 employees, we are unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number of cellular services carriers that would qualify as small business concerns under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 792 small cellular service carriers. 40. 220 MHz Radio Services. Since the Commission has not yet defined a small business with respect to 220 MHz radio services, we will utilize the SBA's definition applicable to radiotelephone companies -- i.e., an entity employing less than 1,500 persons. With respect to the 220 MHz services, the Commission has proposed a two-tiered definition of small business for purposes of auctions: (1) for Economic Area (EA) licensees, a firm with average annual gross revenues of not more than $6 million for the preceding three years and (2) for regional and nationwide licensees, a firm with average annual gross revenues of not more than $15 million for the preceding three years. Since this definition has not yet been approved by the SBA, we will utilize the SBA's definition applicable to radiotelephone companies. Given the fact that nearly all radiotelephone companies employ fewer than 1,500 employees, with respect to the approximately 3,800 incumbent licensees in this service, we will consider them as small businesses under the SBA definition. 41. Private and Common Carrier Paging. The Commission has proposed a two-tier definition of small businesses in the context of auctioning licenses in the Common Carrier Paging and exclusive Private Carrier Paging services. Under the proposal, a small business will be defined as either (1) an entity that, together with its affiliates and controlling principals, has average gross revenues for the three preceding years of not more than $3 million, or (2) an entity that, together with affiliates and controlling principals, has average gross revenues for the three preceding calendar years of not more than $15 million. Since the SBA has not yet approved this definition for paging services, we will utilize the SBA's definition applicable to radiotelephone companies, i.e., an entity employing fewer than 1,500 persons. At present, there are approximately 24,000 Private Paging licensees and 74,000 Common Carrier Paging licensees. We estimate that the majority of private and common carrier paging providers would qualify as small businesses under the SBA definition. 42. Mobile Service Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a definition of small entities specifically applicable to mobile service carriers, such as paging companies. The closest applicable definition under the SBA rules is for radiotelephone (wireless) companies. The most reliable source of information regarding the number of mobile service carriers nationwide of which we are aware appears to be the data that the Commission collects annually in connection with the TRS Worksheet. According to the most recent data, 117 companies reported that they were engaged in the provision of mobile services. Although it seems certain that some of these carriers are not independently owned and operated, or have more than 1,500 employees, we are unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number of mobile service carriers that would qualify under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 117 small entity mobile service carriers. 43. Broadband Personal Communications Service (PCS). The broadband PCS spectrum is divided into six frequency blocks designated A through F and the Commission has held auctions for each block. The Commission defined "small entity'' for Blocks C and F as an entity that has average gross revenues of less than $40 million in the three previous calendar years. For Block F, an additional classification for "very small business" was added and is defined as an entity that, together with their affiliates, has average gross revenues of not more than $15 million for the preceding three calendar years. These regulations defining "small entity'' in the context of broadband PCS auctions have been approved by the SBA. No small businesses within the SBA-approved definition bid successfully for licenses in Blocks A and B. There were 90 winning bidders that qualified as small entities in the Block C auctions. A total of 93 small and very small business bidders won approximately 40% of the 1,479 licenses for Blocks D, E, and F. However, licenses for blocks C through F have not been awarded fully, therefore there are few, if any, small businesses currently providing PCS services. Based on this information, we conclude that the number of small broadband PCS licensees will include the 90 winning C Block bidders and the 93 qualifying bidders in the D, E, and F blocks, for a total of 183 small PCS providers as defined by the SBA and the Commission's auction rules. 44. Narrowband PCS. The Commission has auctioned nationwide and regional licenses for narrowband PCS. There are 11 nationwide and 30 regional licensees for narrowband PCS. The Commission does not have sufficient information to determine whether any of these licensees are small businesses within the SBA-approved definition. At present, there have been no auctions held for the major trading area (MTA) and basic trading area (BTA) narrowband PCS licenses. The Commission anticipates a total of 561 MTA licenses and 2,958 BTA licenses will be awarded in the auctions. Those auctions, however, have not yet been scheduled. Given the facts that nearly all radiotelephone companies have fewer than 1,500 employees and that no reliable estimate of the number of prospective MTA and BTA narrowband licensees can be made, we assume, that all of the licenses will be awarded to small entities, as that term is defined by the SBA. 45. Rural Radiotelephone Service. The Commission has not adopted a definition of small business specific to the Rural Radiotelephone Service, which is defined in Section 22.99 of the Commission's Rules. A significant subset of the Rural Radiotelephone Service is BETRS, or Basic Exchange Telephone Radio Systems (the parameters of which are defined in Sections 22.757 and 22.759 of the Commission's Rules). Accordingly, we will use the SBA's definition applicable to radiotelephone companies, i.e., an entity employing fewer than 1,500 persons. There are approximately 1,000 licensees in the Rural Radiotelephone Service, and we estimate that almost all of them qualify as small under the SBA's definition of a small business. 46. Air-Ground Radiotelephone Service. The Commission has not adopted a definition of small business specific to the Air-Ground Radiotelephone Service, which is defined in Section 22.99 of the Commission's Rules. Accordingly, we will use the SBA's definition applicable to radiotelephone companies, i.e., an entity employing fewer than 1,500 persons. There are approximately 100 licensees in the Air-Ground Radiotelephone Service, and we estimate that almost all of them qualify as small under the SBA definition. 47. Specialized Mobile Radio Licensees (SMR). Pursuant to 47 CFR  90.814(b)(1), the Commission awards bidding credits in auctions for geographic area 800 MHz and 900 MHz Specialized Mobile Radio (SMR) licenses to firms that had revenues of less than $15 million in each of the three previous calendar years. This regulation defining "small entity" in the context of 800 MHz and 900 MHz SMR has been approved by the SBA. 48. The proposed fees in the NPRM applies to SMR providers in the 800 MHz and 900 MHz bands that either hold geographic area licenses or have obtained extended implementation authorizations. We do not know how many firms provide 800 MHz or 900 MHz geographic area SMR service pursuant to extended implementation authorizations, nor how many of these providers have annual revenues of less than $15 million. We do know that one of these firms has over $15 million in revenues. We assume that all of the remaining existing extended implementation authorizations are held by small entities, as that term is defined by the SBA. 49. The Commission recently held auctions for geographic area licenses in the 900 MHz SMR band. There were 60 winning bidders who qualified as small entities in the 900 MHz auction. Based on this information, we conclude that the number of geographic area SMR licensees affected includes these 60 small entities. 50. Private Land Mobile Radio Licensees (PLMR). These radios are used by companies of all sizes operating in all U.S. business categories. Because of the vast array of PLMR users, the Commission has not developed nor would it be possible to develop a definition of small entities specifically applicable to PLMR users. For the purpose of determining whether a licensee is a small business as defined by the SBA, each licensee would need to be evaluated within its own business area. 51. The Commission is unable at this time to estimate the number of small businesses which could be impacted by the rules. However, the Commission's 1994 Annual Report on PLMRs indicates that at the end of fiscal year 1994 there were 1,087,267 licensees operating 12,481,989 transmitters in the PLMR bands below 512 MHz. Further, because any entity engaged in a commercial activity is eligible to hold a PLMR license, these rules could potentially impact every small business in the U.S. 52. Amateur Radio Service. We estimate that 10,000 applicants will apply for vanity call signs in FY 1997. All are presumed to be individuals. All other amateur licensees are exempt from payment of regulatory fees. 53. Aviation and Marine Radio Service. Small businesses in the aviation and marine radio services use a marine very high frequency (VHF) radio, any type of emergency position indicating radio beacon (EPIRB), and/or radar, a VHF aircraft radio, and/or any type of emergency locator transmitter (ELT). The Commission has not developed a definition of small entities specifically applicable to these small businesses. Therefore, the applicable definition of small entity is the definition under the Small Business Administration rules applicable to water transportation and transportation by air. This definition provides that a small entity is any entity employing less than 500 persons for water transportation, and 1,500 for transportation by air. The Commission is unable at this time to make a meaningful estimate of the number of potential small businesses. 54. Most applicants for individual recreational licenses are individuals. Approximately 581,000 ship station licensees and 131,000 aircraft station licensees operate domestically and are not subject to the radio carriage requirements of any statute or treaty. Therefore, for purposes of our evaluations and conclusions in this FRFA, we estimate that there may be at least 712,000 potential licensees which are small businesses, as that term is defined by the SBA. We estimate, however, that only 22,250 will be subject to FY 1997 regulatory fees. 55. Microwave Video Services. Microwave services includes common carrier, private operational fixed, and broadcast auxiliary radio services. At present, there are 22,015 common carrier licensees, approximately 61,670 private operational fixed licensees and broadcast auxiliary radio licensees in the microwave services. Inasmuch as the Commission has not yet defined a small business with respect to microwave services, we will utilize the SBA's definition applicable to radiotelephone companies -- i.e., an entity with less than 1,500 persons. As for estimates regarding small businesses within the broadcast service, we rely on our estimates as discussed under mass media services. Although some of these companies may have more than 1,500 employees, we are unable at this time to estimate with greater precision the number of microwave service providers other than broadcast licensees that would qualify under the SBA's definition. 56. Public Safety Radio Services. Public Safety radio services include police, fire, local government, forestry conservation, highway maintenance, and emergency medical services. There are a total of approximately 127,540 licensees within these services. Governmental entities as well as private businesses comprise the licensees for these services. As we indicated in the introductory paragraph, all governmental entities with populations of less than 50,000 fall within the definition of a small business. There are approximately 37,566 governmental entities with populations of less than 50,000. All of these licensees are exempt from payment of regulatory fees. 57. Personal Radio Services. Personal radio services provide short-range, low power radio for personal communications, radio signalling and business communications not provided for in other services. These services include citizen band (CB) radio service, general mobile radio service (GMRS), radio control radio service, and family radio service (FRS). Inasmuch as the CB, GMRS, and FRS licensees are individuals, no small business definition applies for these services. We are unable at this time to estimate the number of licensees that would qualify as small under the SBA's definition, however, only GMRS licensees are subject to regulatory fees.. 58. Offshore Radiotelephone Service. This service operates on several UHF TV broadcast channels that are not used for TV broadcasting in the coastal area of the states bordering the Gulf of Mexico. At present, there are approximately 55 licensees in this service. We are unable at this time to estimate the number of licensees that would qualify as small under the SBA's definition. IV. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other Compliance Requirements: 59. With certain exceptions, the Commission's Schedule of Regulatory Fees applies to all Commission licensees and regulatees. Most licensees will be required to count the number of licenses or call signs authorized, complete and submit an FCC Form 159, "FCC Remittance Advice," and pay a regulatory fee based on the number of licenses or call signs. Interstate telephone service providers must compute their annual regulatory fee based on their adjusted gross interstate revenue using information they already supply to the Commission in compliance with the TRS Fund, and they must complete and submit the FCC Form 159. Compliance with the fee schedule will require some licensees to tabulate the number of units (e.g., cellular telephones, pagers, cable TV subscribers) they have in service, complete and submit an FCC Form 159. Licensees ordinarily will keep a list of the number of units they have in service as part of their normal business practices. No additional outside professional skills are required to complete the FCC Form 159, and it can be completed by the employees responsible for an entity's business records. 60. Each licensee must submit the FCC Form 159 to the Commission's lockbox bank after computing the number of units subject to the fee. As an option, licensees are permitted to file electronically or on computer diskette to minimize the burden of submitting multiple copies of the FCC Form 159. Although not mandatory, the latter procedure may require additional technical skills. Licensees who pay small fees in advance supply fee information as part of their application and do not need to use the FCC Form 159. 61. Licensees and regulatees are advised that failure to submit the required regulatory fee in a timely manner will subject the licensee or regulatee to a late payment fee of an additional 25% in addition to the required fee. Until payment is received, no new or pending applications will be processed, and existing authorizations may be subject to rescission. Further, in accordance with the Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996, federal agencies may bar a person or entity from obtaining a federal loan or loan insurance guarantees if that person or entity fails to pay a delinquent debt owed to any federal agency. Thus, debts owed to the Commission may result in a person or entity being denied a federal loan or loan guarentee pending before another federal agency until such obligations are paid. 62. The Commission's rules currently make provision for relief in exceptional circumstances. Persons or entities that believe they have been placed in the wrong regulatory fee category or are experiencing extraordinary and compelling financial hardship, upon a showing that such circumstances override the public interest in reimbursing the Commission for its regulatory costs, may request a waiver, reduction or deferment of payment of the regulatory fee. However, timely submission of the required regulatory fee must accompany requests for waivers or reductions. This will avoid any late payment penalty if the request is denied. The fee will be refunded if the request is granted. In exceptional and compelling instances (where payment of the regulatory fee along with the waiver or reduction request could result in reduction of service to a community or other financial hardship to the licensee), the Commission will accept a petition to defer payment along with a waiver or reduction request. V. Significant Alternatives To Proposed Rule Which Minimize Significant Economic Impact on Small Entities and Accomplish Stated Objectives: 63. The Omnibus Consolidated Appropriation Act, Public Law 104-208 , requires the Commission to revise its Schedule of Regulatory Fees in order to recover the amount of regulatory fees that Congress, pursuant to Section 9(a) of the Communications Act, as amended, has required it to collect for Fiscal Year (FY) 1997. See 47 U.S.C. 159 (a). We seek comment on the proposed methodology for implementing these statutory requirements and any other potential impact of these proposals on small business entities. 64. With the introduction of actual cost accounting data for computation of regulatory fees, we found that some fees which were very small in previous years would have increased dramatically. The methodology proposed in this NPRM minimizes this impact by limiting the amount of increase and shifting costs to other services which, for the most part, are larger entities. We seek comment on this proposal. 65. Conversely, we have found that our costs for regulating commercial microwave (domestic public fixed) services are significantly lower than previously thought. We are, therefore, proposing to eliminate the annual "large" regulatory fee for domestic public fixed services and combining this fee category with the private microwave service with a single "microwave" designation. The impact on domestic public fixed licensees will be a reduction of the fee to a "small" up front payment for the entire license term applied only to new, modification and renewal applicants. Current domestic public fixed licensees would be exempt from payment of a regulatory fee until such time as they apply for a modification or renewal of their license. 66. This item also solicits alternative methodologies for assessing fees to recover the regulatory costs attributable to AM and FM radio stations. The radio industry has requested relief for small stations, and we currently have received two alternative proposals which are being evaluated. One would segment licensees by Arbitron radio markets in addition to station class. The other proposal would segment licensees by service area population in addition to station class. The impact of adoption of either alternative proposal is unknown at this time, although either proposal could be expected to result in lower fees for smaller, less powerful stations relative to larger, more powerful stations in the same radio market; or stations potentially serving a larger population. We seek comment on these alternative proposals and the impact they may have on small entities. 67. Several categories of licensees and regulatees are exempt from payment of regulatory fees. See Footnote 106 supra. VI. Federal Rules that May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict With the Proposed Rule: 68. None. Attachment B SOURCES OF PAYMENT UNIT ESTIMATES FOR FY 1997 In order to calculate individual service fees for FY 1997, we adjusted FY 1996 payment units for each service to more accurately reflect expected FY 1997 payment liabilities. We obtained our updated estimates through a variety of means. For example, we used Commission licensee data bases, actual prior year payment records and industry and trade association projections when available. We tried to obtain verification for these estimates from multiple sources and, in all cases, we compared FY 1997 estimates with actual FY 1996 payment units to ensure that our revised estimates were reasonable. Where it made sense, we adjusted and/or rounded our final estimates to take into consideration the fact that certain variables that impact on the number of payment units cannot yet be estimated exactly. These include an unknown number of waivers and/or exemptions that may occur in FY 1997 and the fact that, in many services, the number of actual licensees or station operators fluctuates from time to time due to economic, technical or other reasons. Therefore, when we note, for example, that our estimated FY 1997 payment units are based on FY 1996 actual payment units, it does not necessarily mean that our FY 1997 projection is exactlythe same number as FY 1996. It means that we have either rounded the FY 1997 number or adjusted it slightly to account for these variables. FEE CATEGORY SOURCES OF PAYMENT UNIT ESTIMATES Land Mobile (All), Microwave, IVDS, Marine (Ship & Coast), Aviation (Aircraft & Ground), GMRS, Amateur Vanity Call Signs, Domestic Public Fixed Based on Wireless Telecommunications Bureau (WTB) projections of new applications and renewals taking into consideration existing Commission licensee data bases. Aviation (Aircraft) and Marine (Ship) estimates have been adjusted to take into consideration proposals to license portions of these services on a voluntary basis. CMRS Mobile Services (incl. Cellular/Public Mobile Radio Services and Two Way Paging Services) Based on actual FY 1996 payment units adjusted to take into consideration industry estimates of growth between FY 1996 and FY 1997 and Wireless Telecommunications Bureau projections of new applications and average number of mobile units associated with each application. CMRS One Way Paging Services Based on industry estimates of the number of pager units in operation. AM/FM Radio Stations Based on actual FY 1996 payment units. UHF/VHF Television Stations Based on actual FY 1996 payment units. AM/FM/TV Construction Permits Based on actual FY 1996 payment units. LPTV, Translators and Boosters Based on actual FY 1996 payment units. Auxiliaries Based on actual FY 1996 payment units. MDS/MMDS Based on actual FY 1996 payment units. Cable Antenna Relay Service (CARS) Based on actual FY 1996 payment units. Cable Television System Subscribers Based on Cable Services Bureau and industry estimates of subscribership. IXCs/LECs,CAPs, Other Service Providers Based on actual FY 1996 interstate revenues associated with contributions to the Telecommunications Relay System (TRS) Fund, adjusted to take into consideration FY 1997 revenue growth in this industry as estimated by the Common Carrier Bureau. Earth Stations Based on actual FY 1996 payment units. Space Stations & LEOs Based on International Bureau licensee data bases. International Bearer Circuits Based on International Bureau estimate. International HF Broadcast Stations, International Public Fixed Radio Service Based on actual FY 1996 payment units. Attachment F FY 1997 SCHEDULE OF REGULATORY FEES Fee Category Annual Regulatory Fee PMRS (per license) (Formerly Land Mobile - Exclusive Use at 220-222 MHz, above 470 MHz, Base Station and SMRS) (47 CFR Part 90) 10 Microwave (per license) (47 CFR Part 101) 10 Interactive Video Data Service (per license) (47 CFR Part 95) No Fee Marine (Ship) (per station) (47 CFR Part 80) 5 Marine (Coast) (per license) (47 CFR Part 80) 5 General Mobile Radio Service (per license) (47 CFR Part 95) 5 Land Mobile (per license) (all stations not covered by PMRS and CMRS) 5 Aviation (Aircraft) (per station) (47 CFR Part 87) 5 Aviation (Ground) (per license) (47 CFR Part 87) 5 Amateur Vanity Call Signs (per call sign) (47 CFR Part 97) 5 CMRS Mobile Services (per unit) (47 CFR Parts 20, 22, 24, 80 and 90) .24 CMRS One-Way Paging (per unit) (47 CFR Parts 20, 22 and 90) .03 Multipoint Distribution Services (per call sign) (47 CFR Part 21) 215 AM Radio (47 CFR Part 73) Class A 1,750 Class B 965 Class C 390 Class D 480 Construction Permits 195 Fee Category Annual Regulatory Fee FM Radio (47 CFR Part 73) Classes C, C1, C2, B 1,750 Classes A, B1, C3 1,050 Construction Permits 965 TV (47 CFR Part 73) VHF Commercial Markets 1-10 44,700 Markets 11-25 30,500 Markets 26-50 16,350 Markets 51-100 4,925 Remaining Markets 835 Construction Permits 7,750 TV (47 CFR Part 73) UHF Commercial Markets 1-10 18,875 Markets 11-25 15,625 Markets 26-50 8,250 Markets 51-100 2,875 Remaining Markets 815 Construction Permits 5,950 Satellite Television Stations (All Markets) 975 Construction Permits - Satellite Television Stations 350 Low Power TV, TV/FM Translators & Boosters (47 CFR Part 74) 225 Broadcast Auxiliary (47 CFR Part 74) 25 Cable Antenna Relay Service (47 CFR Part 78) 65 Cable Television Systems (per subscriber) (47 CFR Part 76) .55 Interstate Telephone Service Providers (per revenue dollar) .00119 Fee Category Annual Regulatory Fee Earth Stations (47 CFR Part 25) 515 Space Stations (per operational station in geosynchronous orbit) (47 CFR Part 25) also includes Direct Broadcast Satellite Service (per operational station) (47 CFR Part 100) 98,575 Low Earth Orbit Satellite (per operational system) (47 CFR Part 25) 136,500 INMARSAT/INTELSAT Signatory (per signatory) 326,025 International Circuits (per active 64KB circuit) 5 International Public Fixed (per call sign) (47 CFR Part 23) 315 International (HF) Broadcast (47 CFR Part 73) 390 Attachment G COMPARISON BETWEEN FY 1996 AND FY 1997 PROPOSED REGULATORY FEES Fee Category Annual Regulatory Fee FY 1996 NPRM Proposed Fee FY 1997 PMRS (per license) (Formerly Land Mobile-Exclusive Use at 220-222 Mhz, above 470 Mhz, Base Station and SMRS) (47 CFR Part 90) 7 10 Microwave (per license) (47 CFR Part 101) 7 10 Interactive Video Data Service (per license) (47 CFR Part 95) 7 No Fee Marine (Ship) (per station) (47 CFR Part 80) 3 5 Marine (Coast) (per license) (47 CFR Part 80) 3 5 General Mobile Radio Service (per license) (47 CFR Part 95) 3 5 Land Mobile (per license) (all stations not covered by PMRS and CMRS) 3 5 Aviation (Aircraft) (per station) (47 CFR Part 87) 3 5 Aviation (Ground) (per license) (47 CFR Part 87) 3 5 Amateur Vanity Call Signs (per call sign) (47 CFR Part 97) 3 5 CMRS Mobile Services (per unit) (47 CFR Parts 20, 22, 24, 80 and 90) .17 .24 CMRS One-Way Paging (per unit) (47 CFR Parts 20, 22, and 90) .02 .03 Domestic Public Fixed Radio 155 See Microwave Multipoint Distribution Services (per call sign) (47 CFR Part 21) 155 215 AM Radio (47 CFR Part 73) Class A 1,250 1,750 Class B 690 965 Class C 280 390 Class D 345 480 Fee Category Annual Regulatory Fee FY 1996 NPRM Proposed Fee FY 1997 Construction Permits 140 195 FM Radio (47 CFR Part 73) Classes C, C1, C2, B 1,250 1,750 Classes A, B1, C3 830 1,050 Construction Permits 690 965 TV (47 CFR Part 73) VHF Commercial Markets 1-10 32,000 44,700 Markets 11-25 26,000 30,500 Markets 26-50 17,000 16,350 Markets 51-100 9,000 4,925 Remaining Markets 2,500 835 Construction Permits 5,550 7,750 TV (47 CFR Part 73) UHF Commercial Markets 1-10 25,000 18,875 Markets 11-25 20,000 15,625 Markets 26-50 13,000 8,250 Markets 51-100 7,000 2,875 Remaining Markets 2,000 815 Construction Permits 4,425 5,950 Satellite Television Stations (All Markets) 690 975 Construction Permits - Satellite Television Stations 250 350 Low Power TV, TV/FM Translators & Boosters (47 CFR Part 74) 190 225 Broadcast Auxiliary (47 CFR Part 74) 35 25 Cable Antenna Relay Service (47 CFR Part 78) 325 65 Earth Stations (47 CFR Part 25) 370 515 Fee Category Annual Regulatory Fee FY 1996 NPRM Proposed Fee FY 1997 Cable Television Systems (per subscriber) (47 CFR Part 76) .55 .55 Interstate Telephone Service Providers (per revenue dollar) .00098 .00119 Space Stations (per operational station in geosynchronous orbit) (47 CFR Part 25) also includes Direct Broadcast Satellite Service (per operational station) ( 47 CFR Part 100) 70,575 70,575 98,575 98,575 Low Earth Orbit Satellite (per operational system) (47 CFR Part 25) 97,725 136,500 INMARSAT/INTELSAT Signatory (per signatory) 233,425 326,025 International Circuits (per active 64KB circuit) 4 5 International Public Fixed (per call sign) (47 CFR Part 23) 225 315 International (HF) Broadcast (47 CFR Part 73) 280 390 Attachment H DETAILED GUIDANCE ON WHO MUST PAY REGULATORY FEES 1. The guidelines below provide an explanation of regulatory fee categories established by the Schedule of Regulatory Fees in section 9 (g) of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C.  159(g) as modified in the instant Report and Order. Where regulatory fee categories need interpretation or clarification, we have relied on the legislative history of section 9, our own experience in establishing and regulating the Schedule of Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Years (FY) 1994 and 1995 and the services subject to the fee schedule, and the comments of the parties in our proceeding to adopt fees for FY 1995. The categories and amounts set out in the schedule have been modified to reflect changes in the number of payment units, additions and changes in the services subject to the fee requirement and the benefits derived from the Commission's regulatory activities, and to simplify the structure of the schedule. The schedule may be similarly modified or adjusted in future years to reflect changes in the Commission's budget and in the services regulated by the Commission. See 47 U.S.C.  159(b)(2), (3). 2. Exemptions. Governments and nonprofit entities are exempt from paying regulatory fees and should not submit payment. A nonprofit entity may be asked to submit a current IRS Determination Letter documenting that it is exempt from taxes under Section 501of the Internal Revenue Code or the certification of a governmental authority attesting to its nonprofit status. The governmental exemption applies even where the government-owned or community-owned facility is in competition with a commercial operation. Other specific exemptions are discussed below in the descriptions of other particular service categories. 1. Private Wireless Radio Services 3. Two levels of statutory fees were established for the Private Wireless Radio Services -- exclusive use services and shared use services. Thus, licensees who generally receive a higher quality communication channel due to exclusive or lightly shared frequency assignments will pay a higher fee than those who share marginal quality assignments. This dichotomy is consistent with the directive of Section 9, that the regulatory fees reflect the benefits provided to the licensees. See 47 U.S.C.  159(b)(1)(A). In addition, because of the generally small amount of the fees assessed against Private Wireless Radio Service licensees, applicants for new licenses and reinstatements and for renewal of existing licenses are required to pay a regulatory fee covering the entire license term, with only a percentage of all licensees paying a regulatory fee in any one year. Applications for modification or assignment of existing authorizations do not require the payment of regulatory fees. The expiration date of those authorizations will reflect only the unexpired term of the underlying license rather than a new license term. a. Exclusive Use Services 4. Private Mobile Radio Services (PMRS) (Formerly Land Mobile Services): Regulatees in this category include those authorized under Part 90 of the Commission's Rules to provide limited access Wireless Radio service that allows high quality voice or digital communications between vehicles or to fixed stations to further the business activities of the licensee. These services, using the 220-222 MHz band and frequencies at 470 MHz and above, may be offered on a private carrier basis in the Specialized Mobile Radio Services (SMRS). For FY 1997, we are proposing that PMRS licensees will pay a $10 annual regulatory fee per license, payable for an entire five or ten year license term at the time of application for a new, renewal, or reinstatement license. The total regulatory fee due is either $50 for a license with a five year term or $100 for a license with a 10 year term. 5. Microwave Services: These services include private and commercial microwave systems and private and commercial carrier systems authorized under Part 101 of the Commission's Rules to provide telecommunications services between fixed points on a high quality channel of communications. Microwave systems are often used to relay data and to control railroad, pipeline, and utility equipment. Commercial systems typically are used for video or data transmission or distribution. For FY 1997, we are proposing that Microwave licensees will pay a $10 annual regulatory fee per license, payable for an entire ten year license term at the time of application for a new, renewal, or reinstatement license. The total regulatory fee due is $100 for the ten year license term. 6. Interactive Video Data Service (IVDS): The IVDS is a two-way, point-to-multi-point radio service allocated high quality channels of communications and authorized under Part 95 of the Commission's Rules. The IVDS provides information, products, and services, and also the capability to obtain responses from subscribers in a specific service area. The IVDS is offered on a private carrier basis. The Commission does not anticipate receiving any applications in the IVDS during FY 1997. Therefore, for FY 1997, we are proposing that there be no regulatory fee established for IVDS licensees. b. Shared Use Services 7. Marine (Ship) Service: This service is a shipboard radio service authorized under Part 80 of the Commission's Rules to provide telecommunications between watercraft or between watercraft and shore-based stations. Radio installations are required by domestic and international law for large passenger or cargo vessels. Radio equipment may be voluntarily installed on smaller vessels, such as recreational boats. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 gave the Commission the authority to license certain ship stations by rule rather than by individual license. Private boat operators sailing entirely within domestic U.S. waters and who are not otherwise required by treaty or agreement to carry a radio, are no longer required to hold a marine license, and they will not be required to pay a regulatory fee. For FY 1997, we are proposing that parties required to be licensed and those choosing to be licensed for Marine (Ship) Stations will pay a $5 annual regulatory fee per station, payable for an entire ten-year license term at the time of application for a new, renewal, or reinstatement license. The total regulatory fee due is $50 for the ten year license term. 8. Marine (Coast) Service: This service includes land-based stations in the maritime services, authorized under Part 80 of the Commission's Rules, to provide communications services to ships and other watercraft in coastal and inland waterways. For FY 1997, we are proposing that licensees of Marine (Coast) Stations will pay a $5 annual regulatory fee per call sign, payable for the entire five-year license term at the time of application for a new, renewal, or reinstatement license. The total regulatory fee due is $25 per call sign for the five-year license term. 9. Private Land Mobile (Other) Services: These services include Land Mobile Radio Services operating under Parts 90 and 95 of the Commission's Rules. Services in this category provide one- or two-way communications between vehicles, persons or fixed stations on a shared basis and include radiolocation services, industrial radio services, and land transportation radio services. For FY 1997, we are proposing that licensees of services in this category will pay a $5 annual regulatory fee per call sign, payable for an entire five-year license term at the time of application for a new, renewal, or reinstatement license. The total regulatory fee due is $25 for the five-year license term. 10. Aviation (Aircraft) Service: These services include stations authorized to provide communications between aircraft and between aircraft and ground stations and include frequencies used to communicate with air traffic control facilities pursuant to Part 87 of the Commission's Rules. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 gave the Commission the authority to license certain aircraft radio stations by rule rather than by individual license. Private aircraft operators flying entirely within domestic U.S. airspace and who are not otherwise required by treaty or agreement to carry a radio are no longer required to hold an aircraft license, and they will not be required to pay a regulatory fee. For FY 1997, we are proposing that parties required to be licensed and those choosing to be licensed for Aviation (Aircraft) Stations will pay a $5 annual regulatory fee per station, payable for the entire ten-year license term at the time of application for a new, renewal, or reinstatement license. The total regulatory fee due is $50 per station for the ten-year license term. 11. Aviation (Ground) Service: This service includes stations authorized to provide ground- based communications to aircraft for weather or landing information, or for logistical support pursuant to Part 87 of the Commission's Rules. Certain ground-based stations which only serve itinerant traffic, i.e., possess no actual units on which to assess a fee, are exempt from payment of regulatory fees. For FY 1997, we are proposing that licensees of Aviation (Ground) Stations will pay a $5 annual regulatory fee per license, payable for the entire five-year license term at the time of application for a new, renewal, or reinstatement license. The total regulatory fee is $25 per call sign for the five-year license term. 12. General Mobile Radio Service (GMRS): These services include Land Mobile Radio licensees providing personal and limited business communications between vehicles or to fixed stations for short-range, two-way communications pursuant to Part 95 of the Commission's Rules. For FY 1997, we are proposing that GMRS licensees will pay a $5 annual regulatory fee per license, payable for an entire five-year license term at the time of application for a new, renewal or reinstatement license. The total regulatory fee due is $25 per license for the five-year license term. c. Amateur Radio Vanity Call Signs 13. Amateur Vanity Call Signs: This fee covers voluntary requests for specific call signs in the Amateur Radio Service authorized under part 97 of the Commission's Rules. For FY 1997, we are proposing that applicants for Amateur Vanity Call-Signs will pay a $5 annual regulatory fee per call sign, payable for an entire ten-year license term at the time of application for a vanity call sign. The total regulatory fee due would be $50 per license for the ten-year license term. d. Commercial Wireless Radio Services 14. Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) Mobile Services: The Commercial Mobile Radio Service (CMRS) is an "umbrella" descriptive term attributed to various existing services authorized to provide interconnected mobile radio services for profit to the public, or to such classes of eligible users as to be effectively available to a substantial portion of the public. CMRS Mobile Services include certain licensees which formerly were licensed as part of the Private Radio Services (e.g., Specialized Mobile Radio Services) and others formerly licensed as part of the Common Carrier Radio Services (e.g., Public Mobile Services and Cellular Radio Service). While specific rules pertaining to each covered service remain in separate Parts 22, 24, 80 and 90, general rules for CMRS are contained in Part 20. CMRS Mobile Services will include: qualifying Business Radio Services, 220-222 MHz Land Mobile Systems, Specialized Mobile Radio Services (Part 90); Personal Communications Services (Part 24), Public Coast Stations (Part 80); Public Mobile Radio (Cellular, 800 MHz Air-Ground Radiotelephone, and Offshore Radio Services) (Part 22). Each licensee in this group will pay an annual regulatory fee for each mobile or cellular unit (mobile or cellular call sign or telephone number), including two- way paging units, assigned to its customers, including resellers of its services. For FY 1997, we are proposing that the regulatory fee be $.24 per unit. 15. Commercial Mobile Radio Services (CMRS) One-Way Paging Services: The Commercial Mobile Radio Service (CMRS) is an "umbrella" descriptive term attributed to various existing services authorized to provide interconnected mobile radio services for profit to the public, or to such classes of eligible users as to be effectively available to a substantial portion of the public. CMRS One-Way Paging Services include certain licensees which formerly were licensed as part of the Private Radio Services (e.g., Private Paging), licensees formerly licensed as part of the Common Carrier Radio Services (e.g., Public Mobile One-Way Paging), and licensees of Personal Communications Service (PCS) one-way paging. While specific rules pertaining to each covered service remain in separate Parts 22, 24 and 90, general rules for CMRS are contained in Part 20. We have replaced the Public Mobile One-Way Paging regulatory fee category with a CMRS One-Way Paging Services category for regulatory fee collection purposes. Each licensee in the CMRS One-Way Paging Services will pay an annual regulatory fee for each paging unit assigned to its customers, including resellers of its services. For FY 1997, we are proposing that the regulatory fee be $.03 per unit. 2. Mass Media Services 16. The regulatory fees for the Mass Media fee category apply to broadcast licensees and permittees. Noncommercial Educational Broadcasters are exempt from regulatory fees. a. Commercial AM and FM Radio 17. These categories include licensed Commercial AM (Classes A, B, C, and D) and FM (Classes A, B, B1, C, C1, C2, and C3) Radio Stations operating under Part 73 of the Commission's Rules. We are proposing that the regulatory fees for AM and FM Stations for FY 1997 are as follows: AM Radio Class A .....................................$1,750 Class B ..........................................965 Class C ..........................................390 Class D ..........................................480 FM Radio Classes C, C1, C2, B ................$1,750 Classes A, B1, C3 ...................1,050 b. Construction Permits - Commercial AM Radio 18. This category includes holders of permits to construct new Commercial AM Stations. For FY 1997, we are proposing that permittees will pay a fee of $195 for each permit held. Upon issuance of an operating license, this fee would no longer be applicable and licensees would be required to pay the applicable fee for the designated class of the station. c. Construction Permits - Commercial FM Radio 19. This category includes holders of permits to construct new Commercial FM Stations. For FY 1997, we are proposing that permittees will pay a fee of $965 for each permit held. Upon issuance of an operating license, this fee would no longer be applicable. Instead, licensees would pay a regulatory fee based upon the designated class of the station. d. Commercial Television Stations 20. This category includes licensed Commercial VHF and UHF Television Stations covered under Part 73 of the Commission's Rules, except commonly owned Television Satellite Stations, addressed separately below. Markets are Nielsen Designated Market Areas (DMA) as listed in the Television & Cable Factbook, Stations Volume No. 64, 1996 Edition, Warren Publishing, Inc. We are proposing that the fees for each category of station are as follows: VHF Markets 1-10...............$44,700 VHF Markets 11-25...............30,500 VHF Markets 26-50...............16,350 VHF Markets 51-100...............4,925 VHF Remaining Markets...........835 UHF Markets 1-10...............$18,875 UHF Markets 11-25...............15,625 UHF Markets 26-50.................8,250 UHF Markets 51-100...............2,875 UHF Remaining Markets...........815 e. Commercial Television Satellite Stations 21. We are proposing that commonly owned Television Satellite Stations in any market (authorized pursuant to Note 5 of Section 73.3555 of the Commission's Rules) that retransmit programming of the primary station be assessed a fee of $975 annually. Those stations designated as Television Satellite Stations in the 1996 Edition of the Television and Cable Factbook are subject to the fee applicable to Television Satellite Stations. All other television licensees are subject to the regulatory fee payment required for their class of station and market. f. Construction Permits - Commercial VHF Television Stations 22. This category includes holders of permits to construct new Commercial VHF Television Stations. For FY 1997, we are proposing that VHF permittees will pay an annual regulatory fee of $7,750. Upon issuance of an operating license, this fee would no longer be applicable. Instead, licensees would pay a fee based upon the designated market of the station. g. Construction Permits - Commercial UHF Television Stations 23. This category includes holders of permits to construct new UHF Television Stations. For FY 1997, we are proposing that UHF Television permittees will pay an annual regulatory fee of $5,950. Upon issuance of an operating license, this fee would no longer be applicable. Instead, licensees would pay a fee based upon the designated market of the station. h. Construction Permits - Satellite Television Stations 24. We are proposing that the fee for UHF and VHF Television Satellite Station construction permits for FY 1997 be $350. An individual regulatory fee payment is to be made for each Television Satellite Station construction permit held. i. Low Power Television, FM Translator and Booster Stations, TV Translator and Booster Stations 25. This category includes Low Power UHF/VHF Television stations operating under Part 74 of the Commission's Rules with a transmitter power output limited to 1 kW for a UHF facility and, generally, 0.01 kW for a VHF facility. Low Power Television (LPTV) stations may retransmit the programs and signals of a TV Broadcast Station, originate programming, and/or operate as a subscription service. This category also includes translators and boosters operating under Part 74 which rebroadcast the signals of full service stations on a frequency different from the parent station (translators) or on the same frequency (boosters). The stations in this category are secondary to full service stations in terms of frequency priority. We have also received requests for waivers of the regulatory fees from operators of community based Translators. These Translators are generally not affiliated with commercial broadcasters, are nonprofit, nonprofitable, or only marginally profitable, serve small rural communities, and are supported financially by the residents of the communities served. We are aware of the difficulties these Translators have in paying even minimal regulatory fees, and we have addressed those concerns in the ruling on reconsideration of the FY 1994 Report and Order. Community based Translators are exempt from regulatory fees. For FY 1997, we are proposing that licensees in low power television, FM translator and booster, and TV translator and booster category will pay a regulatory fee of $225 for each license held. j. Broadcast Auxiliary Stations 26. This category includes licensees of remote pickup stations (either base or mobile) and associated accessory equipment authorized pursuant to a single license, Aural Broadcast Auxiliary Stations (Studio Transmitter Link and Inter-City Relay) and Television Broadcast Auxiliary Stations (TV Pickup, TV Studio Transmitter Link, TV Relay) authorized under Part 74 of the Commission's Rules. Auxiliary Stations are generally associated with a particular television or radio broadcast station or cable television system. This category does not include translators and boosters (see paragraph 26). For FY 1997, we are proposing that licensees of Commercial Auxiliary Stations will pay a $25 annual regulatory fee on a per call sign basis. k. Multipoint Distribution Service 27. This category includes Multipoint Distribution Service (MDS), and Multichannel Multipoint Distribution Service (MMDS), authorized under Part 21 of the Commission's Rules to use microwave frequencies for video and data distribution within the United States. For FY 1997, we are proposing that MDS and MMDS stations will pay an annual regulatory fee of $215 per call sign. 3. Cable Services a. Cable Television Systems 28. This category includes operators of Cable Television Systems, providing or distributing programming or other services to subscribers under Part 76 of the Commission's Rules. For FY 1997, we are proposing that Cable Systems will pay a regulatory fee of $.55 per subscriber. Payments for Cable Systems are to be made on a per subscriber basis as of December 31, 1995. Cable Systems should determine their subscriber numbers by calculating the number of single family dwellings, the number of individual households in multiple dwelling units, e.g., apartments, condominiums, mobile home parks, etc., paying at the basic subscriber rate, the number of bulk rate customers and the number of courtesy or fee customers. In order to determine the number of bulk rate subscribers, a system should divide its bulk rate charge by the annual subscription rate for individual households. See FY 1994 Report and Order, Appendix B at Paragraph 31. b. Cable Antenna Relay Service 29. This category includes Cable Antenna Relay Service (CARS) stations used to transmit television and related audio signals, signals of AM and FM Broadcast Stations, and cablecasting from the point of reception to a terminal point from where the signals are distributed to the public by a Cable Television System. For FY 1997, we are proposing that licensees will pay an annual regulatory fee of $65 per CARS license. 4. Common Carrier Services a. Domestic Public Fixed Radio Service 30. This category includes licensees in the Point-to-Point Microwave Radio Service, Local Television Transmission Radio Service, and Digital Electronic Message Service, authorized under Part 101 of the Commission's Rules to use microwave frequencies for video and data distribution within the United States. These services are now included in the Microwave category (see paragraph 5 above). b. Interstate Telephone Service Providers 31. This category includes Inter-Exchange Carriers (IXCs), Local Exchange Carriers (LECs), Competitive Access Providers (CAPs), domestic and international carriers that provide operator services, Wide Area Telephone Service (WATS), 800, 900, telex, telegraph, video, other switched, interstate access, special access, and alternative access services either by using their own facilities or by reselling facilities and services of other carriers or telephone carrier holding companies, and companies other than traditional local telephone companies that provide interstate access services to long distance carriers and other customers. This category also includes pre- paid calling card providers. These common carriers, including resellers, must submit fee payments based upon their proportionate share of gross interstate revenues using the methodology that we have adopted for calculating contributions to the TRS fund. SeeTelecommunications Relay Services, 8 FCC Rcd 5300 (1993), 58 FR 39671 (July 26, 1993). In order to avoid imposing any double payment burden on resellers, we will permit carriers to subtract from their gross interstate revenues, as reported to NECA in connection with their TRS contribution, any payments made to underlying common carriers for telecommunications facilities and services, including payments for interstate access service, that are sold in the form of interstate service. For this purpose, resold telecommunications facilities and services are only intended to include payments that correspond to revenues that will be included by another carrier reporting interstate revenue. For FY 1997, we are proposing that carriers multiply their adjusted gross revenue figure (gross revenue reduced by the total amount of their payments to underlying common carriers for telecommunications facilities or services) by the factor 0.00119 to determine the appropriate fee for this category of service. Regulatees may want to use the following worksheet to determine their fee payment: TOTAL INTERSTATE (1) Revenue reported in TRS Fund worksheets (2) Less: Access charges paid (3) Less: Other telecommunications facilities and services taken for resale (4) Adjusted revenues (1)minus(2)minus(3) (5) Fee factor 0.00119 (6) Fee due (4)times(5) 5. International Services a. Earth Stations 32. Very Small Aperture Terminal (VSAT) Earth Stations, equivalent C-Band Earth Stations and antennas, and earth station systems comprised of very small aperture terminals operate in the 12 and 14 GHz bands and provide a variety of communications services to other stations in the network. VSAT systems consist of a network of technically-identical small Fixed-Satellite Earth Stations which often include a larger hub station. VSAT Earth Stations and C-Band Equivalent Earth Stations are authorized pursuant to Part 25 of the Commission's Rules. Mobile Satellite Earth Stations, operating pursuant to Part 25 of the Commission's Rules under blanket licenses for mobile antennas (transceivers), are smaller than one meter and provide voice or data communications, including position location information for mobile platforms such as cars, buses, or trucks. Fixed-Satellite Transmit/Receive and Transmit-Only Earth Station antennas, authorized or registered under Part 25 of the Commission's Rules, are operated by private and public carriers to provide telephone, television, data, and other forms of communications. Included in this category are telemetry, tracking and control (TT&C) earth stations, and earth station uplinks. For FY 1997, we are proposing that licensees of VSATs, Mobile Satellite Earth Stations, and Fixed-Satellite Transmit/Receive and Transmit-Only Earth Stations will pay a fee of $515 per authorization or registration as well as a separate fee of $515 for each associated Hub Station. 33. Receive-only earth stations. For FY 1997, we are proposing that there be no regulatory fee for receive-only earth stations. b. Space Stations (Geosynchronous) 34. Geosynchronous Space Stations are domestic and international satellites positioned in orbit to remain approximately fixed relative to the earth. Most are authorized under Part 25 of the Commission's Rules to provide communications between satellites and earth stations on a common carrier and/or private carrier basis. In addition, this category includes Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) Service which includes space stations authorized under Part 100 of the Commission's rules to transmit or re-transmit signals for direct reception by the general public encompassing both individual and community reception. For FY 1997, we are proposing that entities authorized to operate geosynchronous space stations (including DBS satellites) will be assessed an annual regulatory fee of $98,575 per operational station in orbit. Payment is required for any geosynchronous satellite that has been launched and tested and is authorized to provide service. c. Low Earth Orbit Satellites (LEOs) 35. Low Earth Orbit Satellite Systems are space stations that orbit the earth in non- geosynchronous orbit. They are authorized under Part 25 of the Commission's rules to provide communications between satellites and earth stations on a common carrier and/or private carrier basis. For FY 1997, we are proposing that entities authorized to operate Low Earth Orbit Satellite Systems will be assessed an annual regulatory fee of $136,500 per operational system in orbit. Payment is required for any LEO System that has one or more operational satellites. d. Signatories 36. A Signatory to INMARSAT is an Administration or government, or the telecommunications entity designated as sole operating entity by an Administration or government, which participates in the International Mobile Satellite Organization (INMARSAT) in order to develop and operate a global maritime satellite telecommunication system which serves maritime commercial and safety needs of the United States and foreign countries. A Signatory to INTELSAT is an Administration or government, or the telecommunications entity designated as sole operating entity by an Administration or government, which participates in the International Telecommunications Satellite Organization (INTELSAT) in order to develop, construct, operate, and maintain the space segment of the global commercial telecommunications satellite system established under the Interim Agreement and Special Agreement signed by Governments on August 20, 1964. For FY 1997, we are proposing that Signatories to INMARSAT and INTELSAT will be assessed an annual regulatory fee of $326,025 in order to recover the cost of the Commission's regulatory activities associated with such entities. e. International Bearer Circuits 37. Regulatory fees for International Bearer Circuits are to be paid by the facilities-based common carriers (either domestic or international) activating the circuit in any transmission facility for the provision of service to an end user or resale carrier. Payment of the fee for bearer circuits by private submarine cable operators is required for circuits sold on an indefeasible right of use (IRU) basis or leased to any customer other than an international common carrier authorized by the Commission to provide U.S. international common carrier services. CompareFY 1994 Report and Order at 5367. The fee is based upon active 64 Kbps circuits, or equivalent circuits. Under this formulation, 64 Kbps circuits or their equivalent will be assessed a fee. Equivalent circuits include the 64 Kbps circuit equivalent of larger bit stream circuits. For example, the 64 Kbps circuit equivalent of a 2.048 Mbps circuit is 30 64 Kbps circuits. Analog circuits such as 3 and 4 KHz circuits used for international service are also included as 64 Kbps circuits. However, circuits derived from 64 Kbps circuits by the use of digital circuit multiplication systems are not equivalent 64 Kbps circuits. Such circuits are not subject to fees. Only the 64 Kbps circuit from which they have been derived will be subject to payment of a fee. For FY 1997, we are proposing that the regulatory fee be $5.00 for each active 64 Kbps circuit or equivalent. For analog television channels we will assess fees as follows: Analog Television Channel No. of equivalent 64 Kbps Size in MHz Circuits 36.................................... 630 24.................................... 288 18..................................... 240 f. International Public Fixed 38. This fee category includes common carriers authorized under Part 23 of the Commission's Rules to provide radio communications between the United States and a foreign point via microwave or HF troposcatter systems, other than satellites and satellite earth stations, but not including service between the United States and Mexico and the United States and Canada using frequencies above 72 MHz. For FY 1997, we are proposing that International Public Fixed Radio Service licensees will pay a $315 annual regulatory fee per call sign. g. International (HF) Broadcast 39. This category covers International Broadcast Stations licensed under Part 73 of the Commission's Rules to operate on frequencies in the 5,950 KHz to 26,100 KHz range to provide service to the general public in foreign countries. For FY 1997, we are proposing that International HF Broadcast Stations will pay an annual regulatory fee of $390 per station license. Attachment I Description of FCC Activities Authorization of Service: The authorization or licensing of radio stations, telecommunications equipment, and radio operators, as well as the authorization of common carrier and other services and facilities. Includes policy direction, program development, legal services, and executive direction, as well as support services associated with authorization activities. Policy and Rulemaking: Formal inquiries, rulemaking proceedings to establish or amend the Commission's rules and regulations, action on petitions for rulemaking, and requests for rule interpretations or waivers; economic studies and analyses; spectrum planning, modeling, propagation-interference analyses, and allocation; and development of equipment standards. Includes policy direction, program development, legal services, and executive direction, as well as support services associated with policy and rulemaking activities. Enforcement: Enforcement of the Commission's rules, regulations and authorizations, including investigations, inspections, compliance monitoring, and sanctions of all types. Also includes the receipt and disposition of formal and informal complaints regarding common carrier rates and services, the review and acceptance/rejection of carrier tariffs, and the review, prescription and audit of carrier accounting practices. Includes policy direction, program development, legal services, and executive direction, as well as support services associated with enforcement activities. Public Information Services: The publication and dissemination of Commission decisions and actions, and related activities; public reference and library services; the duplication and dissemination of Commission records and databases; the receipt and disposition of public inquiries; consumer, small business, and public assistance; and public affairs and media relations. Includes policy direction, program development, legal services, and executive direction, as well as support services associated with public information activities.