The Coalition for a Healthy California et al. (Coalition) petitioned the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to issue a declaratory order holding that the “fairness doctrine” is statutorily mandated by § 315 of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. § 315. The FCC did not respond to this request. The Coalition now petitions this court to so interpret § 315 and to articulate such a declaration. The Coalition explicitly tells us it does not want us to review or to remedy the FCC’s inaction,
BACKGROUND
The Fairness Doctrine
Until 1981, the FCC interpreted § 315 of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C § 315, to require broadcasters to comply with the “fairness dоctrine.” The fairness doctrine, as then construed by the FCC, imposed a two-pronged obligation on all broadcasters licensed by the FCC: (1) the broadcaster must give adequate covеrage to public issues; and (2) that coverage must accurately reflect opposing views on the issues. Arkansas AFL-CIO v. FCC,
In 1986, the D.C. Circuit ruled that the fairness doctrine is not statutorily mandated. Telecommunications Research & Action Ctr. v. FCC,
In 1993, the Eighth Circuit considered en banc whether the fairness doctrine had been codified. Arkansas AFL-CIO v. FCC,
The question underlying the instant action is the same as previously addressed by the Eighth and the District of Columbia Circuits: whether the fairness doctrine is statutorily mandated. Because of defects in the Coalition’s petition, however, we are unable to reach the merits of this case.
The Coalition’s Petition for an Emergency Declaratory Ruling
On August 11, 1994, the Coalition submitted a “Petition for Emergency Declaratory Ruling” to the FCC. This petition asked the FCC to declare that the fairness dоctrine is statutorily mandated, or, in the alternative, that the FCC exercise its discretion and enforce the fairness doctrine. The FCC is authorized to issue declaratory orders under 5 U.S.C. § 554(e):
The аgency, ... in its sound discretion, may issue a declaratory order to terminate a controversy or remove uncertainty.
The Coalition’s petition to the FCC stated that the FCC must make its declаration in less than four weeks, otherwise “Petitioner will deem this Petition to have been denied, and their administrative remedies exhausted for purposes of judicial review.” The FCC did not act оn the request for a declaratory ruling within the requested time — and has not done so since.
On October 5, 1994, the Coalition filed in this court a petition for a writ of mandamus, or in the alternative, for review of the FCC’s inaction. On October 20, 1994, before the FCC filed any papers opposing the motion, we denied the Coalition’s petition in an unpublished order. In re Coalition for a Healthy Cal. et al., No. 94-70632 (9th Cir., Oct. 20, 1994).
On January 9, 1995, the Coalition filed a second petition in this court which is the subject of this opinion. The Coalition argues that the FCC’s failure to act on the FCC petition before the 1994 election constitutes agency actiоn unlawfully withheld and/or unreasonably delayed, and requests this court to “reverse the Commission’s ruling which constituted a denial of Petitioners’ Emergency Petition and declare that the fairness doсtrine is statutorily mandated.”
The FCC filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that by denying the 1994 petition, this court had determined that the FCC had not abused its discretion in refusing to issue the requested declaratory order. The Coalition responded by denying they presently seek “review of any abuse of discretion that may have been involved in the failure to issue a substantive ruling.” Rather, the Coalition asserts it only “seek[s] review of the underlying merits of the matter.” Thus, in essence, the Coalition is asking this court to rule on the merits of the fairness doctrine, not on the FCC’s failure to issue its own ruling.
DISCUSSION
The Coalition argues that once the 1994 election was held, the FCC’s failure to act on the petition became final, and therefore this court can review the merits of the underlying statutory dispute. However, the Coalition cites no authority, and we can find none, in which a court held that an agency improperly failed to issue a declaratory order and then told the agency what that order should say.
This court is authorized to determine the validity of only “final orders” of the FCC. 28 U.S.C. § 2342. A FCC order cannot be considered final unless: (1) “[rjeview of the
Here, the only “final order” of the FCC was its decision not to issue a declaratory order. What that order would be, if issued, is neither known nor final: there hаs been no complete resolution of the merits of case before the agency. Therefore, if so requested, this court could only address the propriety of the FCC’s decisiоn not to issue a declaratory order, not what that order should be.
A similar situation arose in Greater L.A. Council on Deafness, Inc. v. Baldrige,
Moreover, the Coalition is not seeking in this matter to resolve a specific dispute (e.g., a complaint that a specific station has violated the fairness doctrine); rather, as the Coalition readily admits, it seeks very general relief:
a declaration that would require all stations to resume the self-executing, self-enforcing affirmative programing policies that would require сoverage, as well as reasonable balance of such coverage.
Thus, even if the FCC had issued a general declaratory order as the Coalition requested, any review by this court would amount to an advisory opinion prohibited under Article III of the Constitution. See Flast v. Cohen,
In short, this court does not have the power to tell the FCC what to say in the declaratory order requested by Coalition. The relief that this court might have been able to give the Coalition' — ordering the FCC to issue a declaratory order — has been specifically declined by the Coalition. Therefore, we dismiss the petition.
Notes
. Accordingly, we take no position on whether the FCC’s decision not to issue a declaratory order in this case was an abuse of discretion.
. The Coalition also asks, in one of its 101 footnotes, that in the event that we rule against them on the codifiсation issue, we remand this case back to the FCC "to exercise its discretion to resume enforcement of the fairness doctrine as it applies to ballot issue and referendа.” Such a perfunctory request, buried amongst the footnotes, does not preserve an argument on appeal. See Greenwood v. Federal Aviation Admin.,
. Every reported case we have found which examined whethеr an agency improperly refused to issue a declaratory order only considered whether the order was improperly withheld, not what that order should have been. See, e.g., Intercity Trans. Co. v. United States,
