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Proposed State Regs Threaten Public Access
Albany Times Union, June 2003
by Paul M. Bray
While the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has opened the
floodgates to domination of local print and broadcast media by a
few media powerhouses, the NYS Department of Public Service appears
to be proceeding to use its regulatory powers over the cable television
industry to suck the oxygen from the last vestige of local information
broadcasting, community based public access TV.
James Surowiecki described the plight of local media in the New
Yorker: "Now big media players control both programming and
distribution. Five companies own all the broadcast networks, four
of the major movie studios, and ninety per cent of the top fifty
cable channels. Those companies also produce three-quarters of all
prime-time programming. Ten years ago, four of them accounted for
just a quarter of it." Across the political spectrum concern
is being expressed about homogenized news, one size fits all entertainment
and loss of local control, diversity of viewpoints and community
identity.
Some are looking to Congress with Senator Ted Stevens, a Republican
from Alaska leading the charge, to reign in the FCC and overturn
its recent rulings raising the cap on media penetration and the
restriction on cross-ownership. Whether or not Congress acts on
Stevens' legislation, the cat will still be out of the bag on media
concentration. Three companies will continue to own at least half
the radio stations in America.
A grassroots public media access movement offers some promise of
filling the vacuum of local coverage if it can capture technological
capacity and local funding. Instead of New York State proactively
supporting and assisting the development of local capacity in its
communities, it is threatening the existing toehold for public access.
As Mark McGuire reported in the Times Union, the Department of Public
Service "has proposed new regulations that could cut the number
of public, educational and governmental access channels (PEGs) on
TV".
The proposed regulations are available on the web at www.askpsc.com).
They address the cable agreements between municipalities and cable
companies like global Time Warner. Under these agreements, franchise
fees are paid by cable providers to municipalities and provisions
can be made for PEG channels and support for local public access
media centers. In effect, the agreements offer the life-blood for
public access TV (even though many communities pocket the franchise
fees in to their general fund rather than investing it in public
access capacity). Some municipalities like Schenectady take advantage
of the franchise process to develop public access capacity and others
like Albany have no government access programming.
If the Public Service Commission implements the proposed regs,
the time span of cable agreements will be increased from 10 to 15
years and a cable company and municipality could agree to a single
shared access channel instead of the current minimum of two channels.
Overall, the regs have been called "a back door attack upon
public access" by limiting public participation in the franchise
process and lowering the standard for what cable companies could
provide for public access.
Opposition to the proposed regs comes from voices like the Alliance
for Community Media, a national nonprofit membership organization
advocating on behalf of approximately 1500 PEG access centers in
the United State (www.alliancecm.org), NYS Assembly members Ruben
Diaz, Jr. and Jeff Klein and grassroots voices like William Huston
of the Binghamton Public Access Coalition (http://BinghamptonPublicAccess.org).
The Alliance in its comments on the proposed regs pointed out that
New York was in the forefront of requiring public access commitment
from the cable companies. Cable was viewed as the technical means
to bring us all together. Now it appears that neither the State
as protector of the public's right to know and to communicate or
cable companies that should have some level of corporate social
responsibility have any interest in realizing that ideal.
Instead of proposing relaxed cable consumer protections and public
access requirements, we would be much better served as citizens,
members of communities across the state and as beneficiaries of
the overall information age economy to have the department of public
service staff proposing goals and implementation steps so that every
community has state of the art community media access centers and
cable I-NET systems (allowing government, health and school buildings
to be connected by cable).
Believers in a strong local say about the means and content of
communications need to keep an eye not only on Congress where the
FCC rules on media power are being challenged but also on Albany
and your local community where local voices are being threatened.
Comments can be sent to the Department of Public Service by telephone
(800) 335 2120, mail to the Department at Office of the Secretary,
3 Empire State Plaza, Albany, NY 12223 or through their website
at www.askpsc.com.
Paul M. Bray is President of the P.M.Bray LLC, an Albany environmental
and planning law firm. His e-mail address is pmbray@aol.com.
http://www.empirepage.com/eye_from_albany/070103.html
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