The question in this case is whether a Maine television station, having broadcast paid advertisements for snowmobiles, must air the viewpoints of those
*1062
who hold that snowmobiles are environmentally destructive, dangerous, noisy and offensive. The Federal Communications Commission, construing its recently revised fairness doctrine, has ruled not.
Peter B. Herbst,
On January 10, 1973, several viewers resident in Maine wrote to WMTW-TV, a local station. They protested Ski-Doo, Rupp, Alouette and Harley-Davidson ads that were being shown at prime viewing times. As they saw it, the ads presented,
“basically one viewpoint regarding the sale and use of snowmobiles in Maine and greater New England: that snowmobile ownership and use is associated with the good life and should be encouraged, with individuals and families, without fear of one’s own safety at high speeds, often over hilly terrain, and without any conscious consideration of wildlife, vegetation, ecological balance, noise, or safety of others on public lands, or private lands where snowmobile users are illegally trespassing.” 2
The letter spoke of testimony before a Senate subcommittee that the upsurge in snowmobile use threatened the environment, safety, property and wildlife, and caused vandalism and noise. In Maine, the letter pointed out, a controversy raged over proposals before the state legislature for regulation of snowmobile use, speed, noise and the like. Complainants charged that advertisements promoting “unrestricted product uses” did not refer to “other viewpoints on the product uses or of the problems involved.” The snowmobile commercials presented “but one side of the important controversy.”
Citing
Friends of the Earth v. FCC,
When WMTW did not respond promptly, the authors filed a formal complaint before the Federal Communications Commission. They elaborated upon the contention that snowmobiles were unsafe, and that injuries resulted from imprudence, alcohol, and driving in prohibited areas. Television ads were said to foster such excesses by encouraging “increased horse power and speeds and wide-open use over unknown and hilly terrain.” Although the Maine legislature was studying limits on horsepower, speed and noise, the public, it was said, heard only one side. Meanwhile, the number of snowmobiles in Maine had increased from 54,000 in 1971 to 75,000 in 1973.
*1063 In addition to safety problems, snowmobiles were said to stir controversy over the extent of ecological harm (plantlife, some say, is biologically used to being undisturbed in winter), and over injury to property (snowmobiles are alleged to encourage wanton trespassing on the land of others). The Commission was asked to act with speed because the Maine legislature would be in session only briefly and public information was needed on all sides of the pending snowmobile legislation.
After the complaint was filed, WMTW answered that the fairness doctrine was not in issue, and that the ads did not advocate snowmobile misuse. Complainants promptly responded that the issue was not “misuse”: “Whether ‘misuse,’ ‘abuse,’ ‘proper use,’ or any other term is used, these ads present only one side of a controversial issue of public importance. . ” WMTW did offer to air, and aired, a single half-hour discussion program having to do with pending snowmobile regulatory legislation. However, complainants took the position that this one program could not offset five months of repeated and continuous ads.
The Commission’s staff rejected the complaint. There followed review proceedings before the full Commission, during which, for the first time, the texts of the snowmobile ads were produced. The station asserted that they were conventional product ads. Complainants, on the other hand, maintained that they associated snowmobile use with “the good life” and encouraged a heady obliviousness of ecology, property rights and the public welfare.
The Commission eventually denied review of the staff report. By then the Commission had adopted and published its new fairness report,
Fairness Doctrine and Public Interest Standards,
39 Fed.Reg. 26372,
I
We deal initially with the suggestion of the Commission that, either under 28 U.S.C. § 2112(a) or under our inherent authority, we transfer the case to the District of Columbia Circuit for consolidation with National Citizens Committee for Broadcasting v. FCC, No. 74-1700. The latter proceeding, we are told, involves a broad review of the fairness report, including its product commercial policies. Given the desirability of uniform results and the special familiarity of the D.C. Circuit with communications problems, transfer seemed at first to be a plausible course. We accordingly invited supplemental briefing of the issue. Upon further consideration we are disinclined to transfer. The applicability of § 2112(a), as complainants point out, is far from clear, since the agency orders appealed from are altogether different. To be sure, the D.C. Circuit has jurisdiction to hear this case *1064 under 47 U.S.C. § 402(b), and this court has equitable power to transfer cases to a proper forum if it would serve the interests of judicial economy or convenience to the parties. But we cannot be confident that the ends of justice would be served by a transfer since the agency record in NCCB has yet to be filed in the District of Columbia, and indeed the Commission is now reconsidering the case. We thus do not know to what extent the present case would fit in with that proceeding. We are unwilling to project the complainants, against their wills, into such an uncertain future, even assuming the D.C. Circuit would be willing to accept consolidation. Thus, without deciding the question of the applicability of 28 U.S.C. § 2112(a), we decline to transfer.
II
When reviewing the substance of an agency decision, a court is limited to considering whether the decision is arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law, 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A), and to measuring it against the twin external standards of statutory law and constitutional right, id. § 706(2)(B) and (C). We emphasize these standards at the outset, since this case turns as much or more upon observance of the respective functions of the court and agency as upon the merits of this interesting facet of the fairness doctrine controversy. See generally Ellman, And now a Word Against Our Sponsor: Extending the FCC’s Fairness Doctrine to Advertising, 60 Cal.L.Rev. 1416 (1972).
We have no license to regulate broadcasting nor to impose our private views of the public welfare. What we must do is determine whether the Commission is acting within its lawful regulatory authority. In so doing, we shall first consider whether the Commission, judged in terms of its own procedures and precedents, past and present, has acted rationally and properly. Thereafter, we shall consider its actions in terms of statutory and constitutional law.
We begin by summarizing part of the fairness report,
see
note 3
supra,
which explains the Commission’s current policy and its departure in certain respects from earlier policy. The portion of the report dealing with paid announcements begins by quoting the Commission’s pronouncements made in 1929, 3 F.R.C.Ann. Rep. 32 (1929), to the effect that although broadcasters are licensed to serve the public and not the private or selfish interests of individuals or groups, advertising is an “apparent” exception because without it, broadcasting would not exist. From this, the report deduces that “any consideration of the applicability of the fairness doctrine to broadcast advertising must proceed with caution” so as not to undermine the economic base of the system. (Otherwise, the report generally endorses and continues in effect the fairness doctrine.) The report then distinguishes “Editorial Advertising” from “Advertisements for Commercial Products or Services.” It holds that the fairness doctrine should apply to the former so long as the paid announcements present “a meaningful statement which obviously addresses, and advocates a point of view on, a controversial issue of public importance.”
4
Turning to product advertisements, the report recognizes that many advertisements which do not look or sound like editorials are subject to fairness complaints because the business, product or service advertised is itself controversial. Reference is made to the Commission’s “cigarette” ruling,
WCBS-TV,
“With the issue defined in this fashion, it was a simple mechanical procedure to ‘trigger’ the fairness doctrine . . It seemed to be clear enough that all cigarette advertisements suggested that the use of the product was desirable.
In retrospect, we believe that this mechanical approach to the fairness doctrine represented a serious departure from the doctrine’s central purpose which, of course, is to facilitate ‘the development of an informed public opinion’ . . . . We believe that standard product commercials, such as the old cigarette ads, make no meaningful contribution towards informing the public on any side of any issue.”
Indeed, the report says, since the ads did not urge that cigarettes were good for health, a response that they were bad for health left the public with but one viewpoint.
The report went on to chronicle difficulties that arose when the D.C. Circuit refused to allow the Commission to treat the cigarette case as
sui generis.
In
Friends of the Earth v. FCC,
The upshot of the 1974 report is that the FCC cigarette decision is overruled as Commission precedent — on the grounds that without meaningful substantive discussion such as that found in “editorial advertisements” the usual product commercial cannot reasonably be said to inform the public on any side of a controversial issue of public importance, and that application of fairness doctrines to product ads “tends only to divert the attention of broadcasters from their public trustee responsibilities in aiding the development of an informed public opinion.” Henceforth Commission policy will be to apply the fairness doctrine only to those commercials which “are devoted in an obvious and meaningful way to the discussion of public issues.”
The present decision affecting snowmobiles conforms faithfully to the principles just summarized. It is true that it is open to the charge of nonconformity with two earlier agency precedents: the 1967 cigarette case and
Sam Morris,
Nor can we say that the decision reflects a policy which is so clearly irrational on its face as to be “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion.” We distinguish between irrationality and the more complex questions, discussed below, of whether the decision is within the Commission’s statutory and constitutional powers. Applying fairness standards to product commercial raises obvious problems of administration and policy that are open to more than one solution, and the Commission’s present solution, whether right or wrong, was arrived at carefully and is in line with the recommendations of commentators who have studied the problem. H. Geller, The Fairness Doctrine in Broadcasting (1973); Jaffe, The Editorial Responsibility of the Broadcaster: Reflections on Fairness and Access, 85 Harv.L.Rev. 768, 771-80 (1972). Unless the standard of rationality is to be narrowed to a circle no wider than a court’s private judgments, we cannot rule that the Commission’s policies here are “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion” within the meaning of section 706(2)(A).
We turn next to whether the Commission’s exclusion of product commercials which are not facially controversial from fairness obligations is within its statutory authority. The fairness doctrine is not a creature of statute but was evolved over the years by the Commission under the “public interest” standard of the Communications Act. Thus complainants are able to point to little in the way of relevant legislation. Complainants argue that Congress, largely by acquiescence, has “codified” both the fairness doctrine and the Commission’s former application of it to product ads. They contend that the fairness doctrine now applies to all controversial issues, and that since snowmobiles are controversial — especially when advertised at a time when their regulation was being debated in the Maine legislature — the agency acted illegally in declining to apply the doctrine.
But this argument assumes a degree of legislative specificity which simply does not exist. While Congress has been said to have acknowledged and generally endorsed the Commission’s adoption of fairness standards, it has legislated only once on any aspect of the doctrine, and then in an area totally divorced from the thorny issue of product commercials.
See
47 U.S.C. § 315 (equal time doctrine applying to political candidates). In
Red Lion Broadcasting v. FCC,
In
Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc. v. Democratic National Comm.,
“Congress has chosen to leave such questions [as media access] with the Commission, to which it has given the flexibility to experiment with new ideas as changing conditions require. tí
Id.
at 122,
“I think there is a proper role for Commission ‘expertise’ or experience in the administration of the treacherous problems of determining what issues are raised by a broadcast and whether [these] issues are ‘controversial.’ The FCC has by now had 40 years of experience in dealing with telecommunications broadcasts it
National Broadcasting Sys. v. FCC,
There is finally the question whether the Commission’s policy violates the first amendment. Complainants argue that the fairness doctrine serves the first amendment by requiring airwave licensees to be true public forums for the presentation of divergent views. The essence of this argument seems to be that the first amendment requires the fairness doctrine either to be enforced to the hilt or to be supplemented by regulations designed to ensure access to the broadcasting media by all points of view.
Cf. CBS, supra,
This approach does not seem to us to have commanded a majority of the Court (although, to be sure,
CBS
involved issues of access rather than fairness). Furthermore, we have doubts as to the wisdom of mandating, rather than merely allowing, government intervention in the programming and advertising decisions of private broadcasters. It is certainly possible to argue, as complainants suggest here, that “[the] uninhibited marketplace of ideas in which truth will ultimately prevail,”
see Red Lion, supra,
Complainants further see a constitutional violation in differentiating commercials, unreasonably it is said, from all other forms of speech. But as we have previously said, the Commission’s reasons for differentiation, which are explained in the fairness report, can hardly be termed irrational, whatever one’s views as to their soundness. Furthermore, we see no vagueness in the new standards. They are, in fact, remarkably clear when compared with the distinctions that would have to be made were fairness standards to apply to product commercials generally.
Finally, the decision is challenged under section 101(b) of the National Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. § 4331(b), which states the congressional policy that the Government use “all practicable means, consistent with other essential considerations of national policy,” to protect and promote environmental quality. We hesitate to read this section of NEPA as imposing requirements upon the Commission’s regulatory and licensing functions in the areas of program content and speech. Given the prohibition in section 326 of the Communications Act against Commission censorship, we do not believe that section 101(b) of NEPA can be interpreted to compel the Commission to use its licensing power as a lever to impose special standards upon private licensees in the interest of the environment.
Cf. United States v. SCRAP,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Our jurisdiction to review a final order of the Commission is set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 2342 and 47 U.S.C. § 402(a).
. The text of the ads (which, as complainants remind us, does not convey the zooming noises and video images) contained language such as: “The new look of power . . . . Tested under conditions that would turn an ordinary machine into a spinning disaster.” “Rugged and beautiful as the great outdoors.” “Whisper jet.” “We’ll be riding high . . . . We’re goin’ to pass them by.” “Could your snowmobile take punishment like this and them come back for more?” “See who runs quiet. See who packs the power.” “Trail rides two people.” “A power plant without equal.” “The best in family fun. ... On a Polaris winter is just one big fun-filled season.” “It’s a family affair.” “New Ski-Doo quiet.” “The only snowmobile in the country that meets the legal noise limit proposed for 1974. It’s a giant step ahead of the law.” “New safety” on “the machine that changed winter.”
. This is described as a “broad-ranging inquiry into the efficacy of the fairness doctrine,” the first in almost 22 years. Written comments were solicited and panel discussions held. The twin considerations of Commission policy were said to be to foster uninhibited, robust, wide-open debate on public issues, and to maintain and stimulate a commercially based broadcast system. 39 Fed.Reg. 26372, 48 F.C. C.2d 1 (1974).
. This test is aimed at elucidating a broadcaster’s duties when faced with institutional advertisements of a subliminal type which appear to discuss public issues but may not do so explicitly. 39 Fed.Reg. at 26380,
. In
Friends of the Earth v. FCC,
. The majority in
Columbia Broadcasting Sys., Inc. v. Democratic Nat’l Comm.,
“a deeply felt belief that the broadcasting system presents a special situation to which traditional constitutional doctrines should not be mechanically applied. Underlying *1068 this belief is a concern that the delicate interest balancing and complex administrative demands inherent in government regulation of broadcasting require that the public interest be entrusted to an expert agency equipped with broad discretion enabling it to develop flexible solutions unburdened by rigid constitutional standards.”
The Supreme Court, 1972 Term,
87 Harv.L. Rev. 178 (1973);
Cf. Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo,
