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The Billings Gazette
November 2, 2004 Washington DC Gary Smithwick worked as a radio announcer during high school and college. This week, the D.C. telecommunications lawyer will try to buy a radio station. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will auction 288 licenses that grant authority to build commercial FM stations in specified towns and cities across the country. As many as 456 applicants will bid on licenses. "It's like a lottery ticket. People see the licenses and think, 'Maybe there's an investment opportunity for me,"' said Smithwick, a former FCC attorney. The auction, which begins Wednesday, will be the first since 1999 to sell spectrum on the FM dial, and has generated interest among radio conglomerates, regional broadcasters and individuals. At least 47 individuals and companies, including Mr. Smithwick's B&S Broadcasting Co., have been approved by the FCC to bid on a license to build an FM station in Nassawadox, Va., a blip of a town on Virginia's Eastern Shore with 572 persons but no radio station. The licenses most in demand are for stations in Carmel Valley, Calif., and Taft, Calif. Nearly 80 applicants have indicated they will bid on each license. "I have been in this business a long time, and I was shocked at the number of applications for licenses," said George Reed, managing director of Media Services Group, a media brokerage firm in Jacksonville Beach, Fla. Clear Channel Communications Inc., the nation's largest broadcasting company, with about 1,200 radio stations, filed papers with the FCC indicating it will bid on just one license - for a station in rural Manson, Iowa. LUK Broadcasting LLC, owned by the behemoth holding company Leucadia National Corp., which earlier this year said it wanted to buy all of MCI Corp.'s outstanding stock, will bid on up to 286 licenses. Individual investors and radio junkies also will participate in the auction. "There are ÃbiddersÄ who are literally people off the street," said Todd Stansbury, a lawyer in the media group at Wiley, Rein and Fielding, a firm in the District. He predicted the unprecedented interest in new FM stations will make the licenses costly. "Given the fact that we've not seen an auction for five years, I would expect people to be willing to pay. The interesting part to me will be how much people are willing to pay," Mr. Stansbury said. The 1999 auction raised $57.8 million. This year's auction could raise hundreds of millions of dollars. Each license goes to the highest bidder. Companies participating in the auction had to pay a percentage of the value of a license on which they want to bid before the auction, and the FCC has nearly $81 million in upfront money. LUK Broadcasting has put up $10.8 million. The FCC is holding the auction now because of demand for new radio stations. There are 6,218 commercial FM stations, but many towns and small cities are without their own broadcaster. People have asked for stations in these 288 towns and cities because none is home to a licensed station, even though they are within range of other broadcasters, said Peter Doyle, chief of the audio division of the FCC's Media Bureau. Towns throughout the Midwest, West and South are getting most of the new commercial FM radio stations. There are 28 licenses available for stations in Texas, 20 in Colorado, 18 in Montana and 17 in Wyoming. The license for a station in Nassawadox is the only one available in Virginia, and no licenses are available for new stations in Maryland or the District. The signal strength of the stations, which could open within three years, will vary from 3,000 watts to 100,000 watts, based on the classification the FCC has attached to each license. Mr. Smithwick and his business partner, Arthur Belendiuk, aren't thinking about the type of station they want to start. They simply want to obtain a license to broadcast. "We're pretty flexible. Will we play country music? I don't know. I don't care. What you do first is get authorization," he said. http://www.billingsgazette.com/index...ess/56-fcc.inc |
#2
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B & S Broadcasting was eliminated from Auction 37 at the end of round 18 and
thus did not win any construction permits. On Friday afternoon Auction 37 paused for the weekend at the conclusion of round 22. Three licenses have still not received any bids: Gackle, ND; Medina, ND; and Coahoma, TX. Current top bid is $6.1 million for a license in Pacific Junction, IA, followed by just under $4 million for a license in Brewster, MA. Go figure! "Mike Terry" wrote in message ... The Billings Gazette November 2, 2004 Washington DC Gary Smithwick worked as a radio announcer during high school and college. This week, the D.C. telecommunications lawyer will try to buy a radio station. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will auction 288 licenses that grant authority to build commercial FM stations in specified towns and cities across the country. As many as 456 applicants will bid on licenses. "It's like a lottery ticket. People see the licenses and think, 'Maybe there's an investment opportunity for me,"' said Smithwick, a former FCC attorney. The auction, which begins Wednesday, will be the first since 1999 to sell spectrum on the FM dial, and has generated interest among radio conglomerates, regional broadcasters and individuals. At least 47 individuals and companies, including Mr. Smithwick's B&S Broadcasting Co., have been approved by the FCC to bid on a license to build an FM station in Nassawadox, Va., a blip of a town on Virginia's Eastern Shore with 572 persons but no radio station. The licenses most in demand are for stations in Carmel Valley, Calif., and Taft, Calif. Nearly 80 applicants have indicated they will bid on each license. "I have been in this business a long time, and I was shocked at the number of applications for licenses," said George Reed, managing director of Media Services Group, a media brokerage firm in Jacksonville Beach, Fla. Clear Channel Communications Inc., the nation's largest broadcasting company, with about 1,200 radio stations, filed papers with the FCC indicating it will bid on just one license - for a station in rural Manson, Iowa. LUK Broadcasting LLC, owned by the behemoth holding company Leucadia National Corp., which earlier this year said it wanted to buy all of MCI Corp.'s outstanding stock, will bid on up to 286 licenses. Individual investors and radio junkies also will participate in the auction. "There are ÃbiddersÄ who are literally people off the street," said Todd Stansbury, a lawyer in the media group at Wiley, Rein and Fielding, a firm in the District. He predicted the unprecedented interest in new FM stations will make the licenses costly. "Given the fact that we've not seen an auction for five years, I would expect people to be willing to pay. The interesting part to me will be how much people are willing to pay," Mr. Stansbury said. The 1999 auction raised $57.8 million. This year's auction could raise hundreds of millions of dollars. Each license goes to the highest bidder. Companies participating in the auction had to pay a percentage of the value of a license on which they want to bid before the auction, and the FCC has nearly $81 million in upfront money. LUK Broadcasting has put up $10.8 million. The FCC is holding the auction now because of demand for new radio stations. There are 6,218 commercial FM stations, but many towns and small cities are without their own broadcaster. People have asked for stations in these 288 towns and cities because none is home to a licensed station, even though they are within range of other broadcasters, said Peter Doyle, chief of the audio division of the FCC's Media Bureau. Towns throughout the Midwest, West and South are getting most of the new commercial FM radio stations. There are 28 licenses available for stations in Texas, 20 in Colorado, 18 in Montana and 17 in Wyoming. The license for a station in Nassawadox is the only one available in Virginia, and no licenses are available for new stations in Maryland or the District. The signal strength of the stations, which could open within three years, will vary from 3,000 watts to 100,000 watts, based on the classification the FCC has attached to each license. Mr. Smithwick and his business partner, Arthur Belendiuk, aren't thinking about the type of station they want to start. They simply want to obtain a license to broadcast. "We're pretty flexible. Will we play country music? I don't know. I don't care. What you do first is get authorization," he said. http://www.billingsgazette.com/index...ess/56-fcc.inc |
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