More than 150 U.S. television stations will transition to all-digital broadcasts before a June 12 deadline to do so, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission said.
The FCC late Tuesday released a list of 158 TV stations planning to move to digital broadcasts earlier than required, with some as soon as April 1. Dozens of stations on the list plan to transition to DTV broadcasts on April 16.
Six Boston-area stations, two Chicago-area stations, two Dallas-area stations, four Denver-area stations and three Phoenix-area stations plan to make the transition in April. The full list of stations abandoning analog broadcasts before June 12 is on the FCC Web site.
The FCC also released a list of more than 900 TV stations planning to transition on June 12.
Former U.S. President George Bush signed legislation in February 2006 requiring the move. Most of the spectrum being abandoned by the TV stations was sold by the FCC in auctioned that ended in March 2008. Many wireless experts see the abandoned 700MHz spectrum as optimal for wireless broadband services, and Congress designated part of the spectrum to be used for a nationwide broadband network for emergency response agencies.
The original DTV transition deadline was Feb. 17, but Congress voted just weeks before the deadline to extend the date until June 12. Lawmakers had expressed concerns that a voucher program for DTV converter coupons at the U.S. National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) had a waiting list of more than 3.5 million households. The NTIA program had been swamped with coupon requests and some households that did not need coupons had apparently applied for them.
NTIA’s coupon Web site still erroneously lists Feb. 17 as the DTV transition deadline. Older TVs receiving over-the-air broadcasts will need to get converter boxes to continue to receive TV signals after the DTV transition, and U.S. households are eligible for two US$40 coupons.
TV sets connected to cable or satellite service will not need converter boxes.