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FC: James Plummer on FCC deregulation vote and true competition
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Wed, 25 Jun 2003 01:40:29 -0400
---
Date: Tue, 24 Jun 2003 16:55:06 -0400
To: declan () well com
From: J Plummer <jplummer () consumeralert org>
Subject: for politech? : Real Media Reform
Declan,
Politech readers may find my piece below of interest. It's on real media
reform vs. the beltway brouhaha over the new FCC media ownership rules.
- JCP
<http://www.techcentralstation.com/1051/techwrapper.jsp?PID=1051-250&CID=1051-062003F>
Real Media Reform
By James Plummer
6/20/03
The Senate Commerce Committee on Thursday voted by voice vote to roll back
much of the Federal Communications Commission's recent revision of
regulations governing media ownership. The 3-2 party line vote of the FCC
commissioners earlier this month eased restrictions on how many broadcast
television stations one company could own nationwide, and allowed newspaper
owners to purchase a television station in the same market.
The reaction from the pro-regulation crowd was swift. Even as FCC Chairman
Michael Powell called for the ayes and nays from his four colleagues, two
members of the women's left-activist group Code Pink in the audience began
singing and chanting: "Mass deregulation of the mass communication means
the end of democracy."
But what most empowers consumers - and democracy - is the ability of
consumers to freely choose in an open market those media that best fit
their diverse tastes and values. Indeed, "diversity, localism and
competition" were the policy buzzwords repeated as a mantra by
commissioners and senators between the fractious FCC meeting and a
follow-up Congressional hearing. And not without reason.
The evidence does indeed indicate that diverse consumers do want
"diversity," including "localism," among their media choices. But
competition, not "public interest" regulation, is the only way to ensure
these choices reflect the values and tastes of consumers rather than
bureaucrats and special-interest groups.
And to that end, the FCC's action, for all the chanting to the contrary,
was a positive step for consumers. In an age of cable, satellite, DVD and
Internet, greater opportunities for horizontal and vertical integration can
enable not only the media dinosaurs to diversify their offerings, but also
allow new independent operators, such as the family-oriented Paxson
Communications and its Pax Network, to compete by offering consumers
something new.
In point of fact, Pax was only able to offer a family-friendly alternative
to the big networks by owning and operating broadcast stations reaching
more than 60 percent of the country. It skirted the FCC rules limiting
station ownership to 35 percent of the country because UHF stations counted
as only half a station.
The new FCC rules take the ownership limit up to 45 percent. But the Senate
Commerce Committee action would make permanent the old 35 percent national
market-penetration standard (as would a separate bill pending in the
House). Such a measure would in fact hinder the diversity and competition
offered by upstarts such as Pax.
The Commerce Committee bill also included a reinstatement of a ban on
newspapers owning a television station in the same market. And the
committee separately passed a measure revoking a grandfather clause
protecting companies whose holdings already exceeded new caps on radio
ownership in one market.
If members of Congress really wants to bring about more "diversity,
localism and competition" in media markets, they will let the ruling stand,
and instead take measures to tear down barriers to entry in broadcasting.
Congress should:
· End suppression of microradio -- Those who profess a concern for
"diversity, localism and competition" could start by reversing the Radio
Broadcasting Preservation Act, passed as part of the appropriations bill in
2000. The act itself overturned the FCC's modest attempt in 1999 to license
low-power "microradio" broadcasters. It cut in half the small number of
low-power licenses the FCC was set to grant and also barred the Commission
from eliminating or reducing the "minimum distance separations" between
stations on the radio dial. In effect, that limits the number of licenses
for new stations while ignoring the digital technology that makes wide
separation unnecessary. If diversity and competition aren't just rhetorical
terms, it needs to lift the caps so scrappy start-ups can provide
independent, local coverage.
· Roll back the digital mandate -- Besides giving away a huge,
valuable, swath of spectrum to the very corporations they now worry are
becoming too powerful, the federal mandates increase the costs of
maintaining a broadcast station by upwards of $1 million. This
anti-competitive barrier to entry crowds out smaller stations, the ones
that typically offer more diverse and local content.
· Drive a stake through the estate tax -- Family-owned local media,
whether they be daily newspapers or television stations, are at a distinct
disadvantage with national or international corporations. Corporations
never die; people do. And once every generation a family has upwards of
half its capital confiscated by the federal government. This simple truth
explains much of the consolidation of media and other businesses over the
past century, as local owners converted their private interests into public
shares of stock in media conglomerates. The current estate tax structure
calls for the tax to slowly be phased to nothing in 2010, and then
reinstated in 2011. That's hardly something estate planners can count upon.
This typical slice of Beltway insanity provides family-run businesses with
no assurance, outside of a carefully timed suicide, that the business will
stay in family hands. The incentives to sell out remain. If Congress
prefers independent media to corporate conglomeration, they must make the
repeal of the estate tax complete and permanent.
Any one of these institutional reforms would do more to bring about true
competition -- including "diversity and localism" in the electronic media
-- than simply rolling back a technical regulatory decision. The question
is does anyone on the Hill have the fortitude to do anything about them?
James Plummer is a policy analyst for Consumer Alert, a non-profit consumer
group based in Washington, DC.
06/20/
James
Plummer
jplummer () consumeralert org
http://www.nccprivacy.org/ Policy Analyst,
Consumer Alert
National Consumer Coalition Privacy Group Phone: 202-467-5809
Fax:
202-467-5814
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