Barton: 2009 Analog-Cutoff Date 'Frozen'
By John Eggerton
Broadcasting & Cable
5/26/2005 12:16:00 PM
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA604007.html?display=Breaking+News&referral=SUPP
It looks as though New Years Day 2009 will definitely be D-Day for the
cutoff of analog-TV service.
At a hearing on draft digital-TV legislation Thursday, House Commerce
Committee chairman Joe Barton (R-Texas) said the "discussion draft" had
room for negotiation on numerous points, but the Dec. 31, 2008, cutoff date
is "pretty much frozen."
Barton also said he would support a limited, means-tested subsidy for
digital converter boxes to low-income analog viewers, although no subsidy
was in the draft.
The hearing was not on a bill, per se, but on a draft of a bill because the
committee members failed to agree on one.
Rep Ed Markey (D-Mass.) said the committee was able to agree on the need to
bring the DTV transition to a conclusion and that a hard date was needed to
do that. They also agreed on the need to return frequencies for use by
emergency communications and new broadband wireless services.
"Notwithstanding that accord," he said, what could not be resolved were any
new public interest obligations, multicast must-carry, cable's
downconversion of DTV for analog subscribers, and how to treat consumers
fairly when the government renders their analog TV's "inoperable."
The key consumer fairness issue and a point of wide divergence among the
members is a government subsidy for converter boxes to allow
disenfranchised analog-only sets to operate in the digital age.
Some legislators want a subsidy for all 73 million analog sets, including
second or third analog-only sets in cable and satellite homes, regardless
of income. They point out that auction of the reclaimed analog spectrum
could raise as much as $30 billion, against which a subsidy of $3.7 billion
($50 per converter box for all 73 million analog-only sets) would be doable
with plenty left over for the treasury. Others argue that with proper
notification that the switch is coming, no subsidy may be necessary.
Because it involves billions to the treasury from an analog spectrum
auction, the DTV bill is tied to a budget reconcilliation bill. Several
legislators backing the subsidy warned that telcom policy was in danger of
being trumped by budget concerns, and argued that the first
dollars--potentially to the last--should go to covering subsidy before any
other budgetary claims were put on it.
But whether it is a subsidy or sufficient notification, all seemed in
agreement that the analog cut-off could become a political land mine if not
handled correctly.
Rep. Jay Inslee (D-Wash.) suggested that if a DTV hard date bill passed
Tuesday "we would all be impeached Wednesday."
While several legislators have latched onto the "new third rail" metaphor
for the "untouchability" of TV service, Inslee invoked Jim Croce in
offering a new one (this is a close paraphrase): "You don't tug on
Superman's cape, you don't spit into the wind, you don't pull the mask on
that old Lone Ranger, and you don't take away people's TV service"
Democrat Edolphus Towns of New York had an amendment to that: You don't let
others steal it, either. Towns said he would work to have language
introduced to the bill empowering the FCC to mandate the broadcast flag
technology that protects digital content from widespread piracy. The court
threw out the FCC's broadcast flag rule, saying it had no authority to
impose it.
Fellow New York Democrat Eliot Engel shared that concern over protecting
digital content, pointing out that bootlegged digital copy of the new Star
Wars movie was available online simultaneously with its theatrical release
and on DVD soon after.
Ranking committee Democrat John Dingell (Mich.) said the bill must address
two questions answered: 1) "Why should ordinary citizens pay more because
of a governmental decision that makes their television sets obsolete?" and
2) "Why can't the proceeds from the sale of spectrum, which is a public
good, be used to reimburse citizens for their transition costs and for
other important telecommunications and public safety needs?"
Barton said he expected the DTV bill to be part of a larger budget
reconciliation package sent to the budget committee by September, and that
it would become law by the end of the year.
=================================================
George Antunes Voice (713) 743-3923
Associate Professor Fax (713) 743-3927
Political Science Internet: antunes at uh dot edu
University of Houston
Houston, TX 77204-3011
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