The Australian Broadcasting Control Board was an Australian government agency formed in 1949 whose main roles were to regulate commercial radio and television broadcasting.[1] It was also the introducer and regulator for FM broadcasting.[2]
The agency held public hearings, issued commercial broadcasting licenses, and performed the technical planning for the National and Commercial broadcasting networks.[3]
The Postmaster-General's Department was responsible for the engineering functions for the National transmitter facilities. Commercial broadcasters were responsible for their own construction and installation.[4]
^Australian Broadcasting Control Board. (1950), "29 v. ; 34 cm.", Annual report of the Australian Broadcasting Control Board., Parliamentary paper (Australia. Parliament), Canberra: Printed and published for the Government of the Commonwealth of Australia by L.F. Johnston, Commonwealth Govt. Printer, nla.obj-2141195117, retrieved 30 November 2021 – via Trove