, in 1937. Seated (l-r) Eugene Octave Sykes,
Frank R. McNinch,
Chairman Paul Atlee Walker, Standing (l-r)
T.A.M. Craven,
Thad H. Brown,
Norman S. Case, and
George Henry Payne.
Communications Act of 1934 On February 26, 1934, President Franklin Roosevelt recommended the creation of the Federal Communications Commission. In 1934, Congress passed the
Communications Act, which abolished the
Federal Radio Commission and transferred jurisdiction over radio licensing to a new Federal Communications Commission, including in it also the telecommunications jurisdiction previously handled by the Interstate Commerce Commission. Title II of the Communications Act focused on telecommunications using many concepts borrowed from railroad legislation and Title III contained provisions very similar to the
Radio Act of 1927. The initial organization of the FCC was effected July 17, 1934, in three divisions, Broadcasting, Telegraph, and Telephone. Each division was led by two of the seven commissioners, with the FCC chairman being a member of each division. The organizing meeting directed the divisions to meet on July 18, July 19, and July 20, respectively.
Report on Chain Broadcasting In 1941, the Federal Communications Commission issued the "
Report on Chain Broadcasting" which was led by new FCC chairman
James Lawrence Fly (and
Telford Taylor as general counsel). The major point in the report was the breakup of the
National Broadcasting Company (NBC), which ultimately led to the creation of the
American Broadcasting Company (ABC), but there were two other important points. One was network option time, the culprit here being the
Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS). The report limited the amount of time during the day and at what times the networks may broadcast. Previously a network could demand any time it wanted from a
Network affiliate. The second concerned artist bureaus. The networks served as both agents and employers of artists, which was a conflict of interest the report rectified.
Freeze of 1948 In assigning television stations to various cities after
World War II, the FCC found that it placed many stations too close to each other, resulting in interference. At the same time, after eliminating channel 1, it became clear that the designated remaining
VHF channels, 2 through 13, were inadequate for nationwide television service. As a result, the FCC stopped giving out construction permits for new licenses in October 1948, under the direction of Chairman
Rosel H. Hyde. Most expected this "Freeze" to last six months, but as the allocation of channels to the emerging
UHF technology and the eagerly awaited possibilities of color television were debated, the FCC's re-allocation map of stations did not come until April 1952, with July 1, 1952, as the official beginning of licensing new stations. Other FCC actions hurt the fledgling
DuMont and ABC networks.
American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T) forced television coaxial cable users to rent additional radio
long lines, discriminating against DuMont, which had no radio network operation. DuMont and ABC protested AT&T's television policies to the FCC, which regulated AT&T's long-line charges, but the commission took no action. The result was that financially marginal DuMont was spending as much in long-line charge as CBS or NBC while using only about 10 to 15 percent of the time and mileage of either larger network. The FCC's Sixth Report and Order ended the Freeze in 1952. It took five years for the US to grow from 108 stations to more than 550. New stations came online slowly, only five by the end of November 1952. The Sixth Report and Order required some existing television stations to change channels, but only a few existing VHF stations were required to move to UHF, and a handful of VHF channels were deleted altogether in smaller
media markets like
Peoria,
Fresno,
Bakersfield and Fort Wayne, Indiana to create markets which were UHF "islands". The report also set aside a number of channels for the newly emerging field of
educational television, which hindered struggling
ABC and
DuMont's quest for affiliates in the more desirable markets where VHF channels were reserved for non-commercial use. The Sixth Report and Order also provided for the "intermixture" of VHF and UHF channels in most markets; UHF transmitters in the 1950s were not yet powerful enough, nor receivers sensitive enough (if they included UHF tuners at all; they were not formally required until the 1960s
All-Channel Receiver Act), to make UHF viable against entrenched VHF stations. In markets where there were no VHF stations and UHF was the only TV service available, UHF survived. In other markets, which were too small to financially support a television station, too close to VHF outlets in nearby cities, or where UHF was forced to compete with more than one well-established VHF station, UHF had little chance for success.
Denver had been the largest U.S. city without a TV station by 1952. Senator
Edwin Johnson (D-Colorado), chair of the Senate's
Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee, had made it his personal mission to make Denver the first post-Freeze station. The senator had pressured the FCC, and proved ultimately successful as the first new station (a VHF station) came on-line a remarkable ten days after the commission formally announced the first post-Freeze construction permits. KFEL (now
KWGN-TV)'s first regular telecast was on July 21, 1952.
Telecommunications Act of 1996 In 1996, Congress enacted the Telecommunications Act of 1996, in the wake of the
breakup of AT&T resulting from the U.S. Department of Justice's antitrust suit against AT&T. The legislation attempted to create more competition in local telephone service by requiring
Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers to provide access to their facilities for
Competitive Local Exchange Carriers. This policy has thus far had limited success and much criticism. The development of the Internet, cable services and wireless services has raised questions whether new legislative initiatives are needed as to competition in what has come to be called 'broadband' services. Congress has monitored developments but as of 2009 has not undertaken a major revision of applicable regulation. The
Local Community Radio Act in the
111th Congress has gotten out of committee and will go before the house floor with bi-partisan support, and unanimous support of the FCC. By passing the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Congress also eliminated the cap on the number of radio stations any one entity could own nationwide and also substantially loosened local radio station ownership restrictions. Substantial radio consolidation followed. Restrictions on ownership of television stations were also loosened. Public comments to the FCC indicated that the public largely believed that the severe consolidation of media ownership had resulted in harm to diversity, localism, and competition in media, and was harmful to the public interest.
Modernization of the FCC's information technology systems David A. Bray joined the commission in 2013 as
chief information officer and quickly announced goals of modernizing the FCC's legacy
information technology (IT) systems, citing 200 different systems for only 1750 people a situation he found "perplexing". These efforts later were documented in a 2015 Harvard Case Study. In 2017, Christine Calvosa replaced Bray as the acting CIO of FCC.
2023 reorganization and Space Bureau establishment On January 4, 2023, the FCC voted unanimously to create a newly formed Space Bureau and Office of International Affairs within the agency, replacing the existing International Bureau. FCC chairwoman
Jessica Rosenworcel explained that the move was done to improve the FCC's "coordination across the federal government" and to "support the 21st-century satellite industry." The decision to establish the Space Bureau was reportedly done to improve the agency's capacity to regulate
Satellite Internet access. The new bureau officially launched on April 11, 2023.
FCC review of rules on network mergers (2025-present) On September 30, 2025, the FCC launched a new review of its media ownership limits, amid broadcasters’ lobbying push to modernize the restrictions in the face of competition from tech giants. The agency voted to take public comment, including on a rule that limits a company from owning more than two stations in a market, and a restriction on mergers between any two of the four major broadcast networks. On November 19, 2025, FCC chairman Brendan Carr announced a review of the relationships between broadcast networks and their affiliates, calling into question contractual restrictions that penalize stations for pre-empting shows and those that prevent them from airing rival programming. The FCC will take comments on a host of issues, rooted in Carr's belief that networks have gained too much leverage at the expense of local stations. He wrote on X, “The FCC has an obligation to ensure that local broadcast TV stations meet their public interest obligations. Yet National Programmers operating out of New York & Hollywood are reportedly preventing those broadcasters from serving their local communities—including by punishing them for exercising their right to preempt national programming.”
Attempted abandonment of independence by FCC chairman Brendan Carr On December 17, 2025, FCC chairman Brendan Carr told a Senate committee that "The FCC is not formally an independent agency" when asked by Senator
Ben Ray Luján "Yes or no ... is the FCC an independent agency?". Shortly after this all mentions of "independent" or "independence" had been removed from FCC.gov. An FCC spokesperson stated, in response to inquiries about the deletion that "With the change in Administration earlier this year, the FCC's website and materials required updating. That work continues to ensure that they reflect the positions of the agency's new leadership." In light of warnings from
Brendan Carr, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, that the
fairness doctrine might apply to
the talk show,
CBS suppressed
Stephen Colbert's interview with candidate
James Talarico. It was then presented on
YouTube, garnering far more views than it might have gotten if it had been aired on CBS. This was said to be “the
Streisand effect." ==Commissioners==