Cable TV Regulation
Federal Communications Commission
The telecommunications regulations issues by the FCC appear in Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR). The CFR is the codification of the rules and regulations (administrative law) by the executive departments and agencies responsible for interpreting and implementing statutes in the United States Code. Cable TV is regulated by Part 76 of Title 47 CFR ( PDF version). The FCC has the authority to set rules for local cable franchising.
Since the first cable systems appeared in the early 1950s, Cable TV operators have been required to obtain local franchise agreements from local municipalities to build systems using public rights-of-way. Franchise agreements generally impose various requirements on the Cable TV operator, including channel capacity, services offered, programming offered, product pricing, construction standards, build-out requirements, customer service standard as well as Public, Educational, and Governmental (PEG) access channel requirements. Franchisees also are usually required to pay fees to the local franchising authority for the use of the public rights of way. More recently, a number of states have enacted legislation which regulates cable franchising at a state rather than local level
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