*America's comms watchdog takes on the internet era's real criminals:
Pirate pastors*

*And helps cable industry tackle scourge of streaming boxes*

By Kieren McCarthy in San Francisco
TheRegister.co.uk

25 May 2018 at 21:38

https://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/05/25/fearless_fcc_pirate_radio_pastors/


US airwaves watchdog the FCC has taken a lot of flak in the past year for
its determined effort to roll back its own rules on net neutrality – but
that issue aside, the federal regulator has its finger on the pulse of
America in the internet era.

Which is why it is reassuring to see the hard line that continues to be
taken on the cutting edge of modern media consumption: pirate radio.

"Why do some pastors/churches think they can run illegal pirate radio
'stations'?" FCC Commissioner Michael O'Reilly roared on Friday, noting:
"There is no pastoral exemption in FCC rules. And they aren’t exempt from
other laws/rules."

That's right, at a time when the nation's lawmakers are focused on people's
private data being gathered and sold by companies like Facebook and Google,
with small businesses complaining that they could be put out of business by
Big Cable charging them access fees, and Puerto Rico still trying to get
back on its feet following a hurricane nine months ago, the FCC has pirate
radio firmly in its sights.

And O'Reilly in particular wants an even harder line to be taken on these
law-breaking ministers. "Thank you FCC enforcement personnel for seeking
compliance with FCC rules. Pirate radio is ILLEGAL," he noted [his caps]
this week before warning: "Need to get rid of 'warning' process: a giant
loophole/obstacle to enforcement."

That's right – these criminal churches know what they're doing is wrong.
There should be no notice – just send in the SWAT team and shut 'em down.

In this case it's pastor Francisco Guzman’s from the Iglesia La Nueva
Jerusalen church in Baton Rouge who is spitting in the face of everything
America holds dear by broadcasting messages about Jesus in his immediate
area on 87.9 FM and 1710 AM.

*Shameless*

Guzman's law breaking is shameless too: he even posts information about his
radio station on the church's website. And this is despite FCC enforcers
going easy on him and giving him a warning back in December – back when he
was broadcasting on 107.7 FM.

But there are others too. A station operating at 104.1 FM in West Palm
Beach was tracked back to the Omega Church International Ministries.
Another at the Gospel Tabernacle Church of Jesus Christ in Irvington, New
Jersey (93.3 FM).

And that follows the disgraceful pastor Yvon Grand-Champ who thought
nothing of breaking the law at The Revelation Pentecostal Holy Church in
Boston suburb Mattapan on 106.3 FM before the FCC shut him down.

The FCC is not taking such horrific behavior lying down however. Earlier
this month it announced the seizure of equipment in Manhattan – stopping
Rumba FM (95.3 FM) in its tracks.

The chief of the FCC's enforcement division, Rosemary Harold, was
unforgiving. "Pirate radio stations are illegal, as they operate without an
FCC license, and cause real harm," she told the jostling pack of reporters
eager to hear of any updates in this critical battle against unlicensed
radio stations.

"These stations can cause interference to legitimate, licensed broadcasters
and can prevent those broadcasters from delivering critical public-safety
information to listeners," she continued to rapturous applause before being
carried on the shoulders of citizens, many of whom had travelled for hours
just to hear the announcement in person.

*Brave*

This important crackdown is largely thanks to the brave leadership of FCC
chair Ajit Pai who boldly stated last month that "fighting unlawful
broadcasts is a top enforcement priority for the FCC."

He also pointed to the very real danger that pirate operators pose. They
can "interfere with important public safety announcements and hurt licensed
broadcasters’ business," he railed. "Consumers should be able to get the
news and information programming they count on."

The FCC has carried out twice as many investigations and actions against
pirate radio stations this year than last: an indication that the FCC under
Pai is spending less time focused on the distracting issue of the so-called
internet and more on the critical FM question.

Since January 2017, its enforcement team have carried out 306 pirate
investigations and issued 210 notices of unlicensed operation. Something
that will leave Americans sleeping more soundly in their beds.

That's not all either: the FCC is supporting new legislation that will
hopefully bring an end to this national disgrace through the Preventing
Illegal Radio Abuse Through Enforcement Act – it spells "pirate."

"Pirate radio 'stations' are harmful for listeners as well as our nation’s
licensed broadcasters," O'Reilly told a packed room of god-fearing
Americans just this month.

"This bill rightfully increases the penalties, requires regular enforcement
sweeps, and augments the tools available to the Commission, which are
woefully inadequate and outdated, to deal with illegal pirate broadcasters."

You hear that pirates? Your days are numbered.

*Defender*

But if thought this important clampdown on pirate radio was distracting the
FCC from more important issues in the digital era, you couldn’t be more
wrong.

O'Reilly is equally determined that the federal regulator continue to serve
its most important stakeholders – no, not US citizens; cable companies.

Having killed off plans by the previous FCC chair Tom Wheeler to open up
the cable set top box market: an entirely artificial market that rips US
consumers off to the tune of $231 per person per year and results in a
$20bn annual windfall for cable companies, the current FCC leadership is
trying to make sure that no one can get access to boxes that allow them to
do the same thing as cable boxes without having to pay a monthly "rental
fee."

O'Reilly has sent a letter to the CEOs of Amazon and eBay urging them to
clampdown on products sold on their services that allow people to bypass
cable company control.

In fact the commissioner feels so strongly about the issue that he is
willing to ignore his own constantly stated rule that the FCC should not
try to extend its influence beyond a very tight remit, by insisting on the
action despite acknowledging that the entire thing is "outside the
jurisdiction of the Commission."

Now that is dedication.

It's 2018 and you can watch live TV broadcasts from the other side of the
world directly on your mobile phone while walking down the street. Which is
why it is so heartening to see the FCC keenly focused on protecting the
cable industry's set-top boxes and clamping down on pastors running radio
stations.
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