Massive Rereg Bill Introduced
By John Eggerton
Broadcasting & Cable
7/18/2005 3:11:00 PM
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA626499.html?display=Breaking+News&referral=SUPP
Democratic New York Representative Maurice Hinchey last week introduced a
bill that would massively reregulate the media.
Chances for such a bill are nearly nil and it should be seen more as a shot
across the bow by liberal Democrats as a Republican Congress takes up the
1996 Act in the context of the broadband revolution and the transition to
digital TV.
Hinchey's goal, he said, in introducing the Media Ownership Reform Act of
2005 (H.R. 3302), would be to fix what he calls a "broken media system in
the United States in which only a select group of individuals get to
determine what information Americans can receive via television, newspaper,
radio, and other media."
The sweeping bill, which was introduced July 14, would: 1) invalidate all
of the FCC's 2003 media ownership rule rewrite (an appeals court only
remanded the rules for a re-do), and reinstate the newspaper-broadcast
cross ownership rule the local TV multiple ownership rule that the FCC
scrapped in the 2003 rewrite; 2)restore the fairness doctrine; 3) lower
the cap on TV station ownership from the 39% (raised by Congress) back to
to 25%; 4) reduce the number of radio and TV stations a company can own; 5)
increase the number of public interest obligations on all broadcasters; 6)
get rid of the UHF discount "loophole" that counts only half a UHF
station's audience reach toward ownership caps.
But wait, there's more.
The bill would change the FCC's biennial reg review to triennial (two years
does not seem to give the FCC enough time, particularly if the changes are
controversial), but would require any media ownership rule to be published
in the Federal Register and be the subject of at least five public hearings
across the country. (FCC Chairman Kevin Martin is said to be agreeable to
that number of hearings on the FCC's current attempted rewrite of the 2003
rules.)
The bill, co-sponsored by Diane Watson (D-Calif.), would also take aim at
vertical integration by mandating more independently-produced programming
on the TV networks.
And there is much more still, but essentially it is an anti-consolidation
activist's wish-list that would wipe out the deregulation of the 1996
Telecommunications Act and then some.
"From the recent debate over public broadcasting, to the uproar that
followed when the FCC tried to weaken its media ownership rules in June
2003, it is clear that Americans want a diverse media that is responsive to
local communities," Hinchey said in introducing the bill.
Hinchey was a leader of the protest against the CPB budget cuts, including
helping lead a rally of the cuts on Capitol Hill. Those cuts, themselves a
shot across the bow by Republicans at what they see as the liberal noncom
media, have been restored.
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923 Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu
Reply with a "Thank you" if you liked this post.
_______________________________________________
MEDIANEWS mailing list
[email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]