
Prometheus News
Ralph Nader Speaks Out for Low-power Radio
In the Public Interest
By Ralph Nader
October 2000
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
The airwaves belong to the people. Yet the U.S. government gives them
away to television and radio broadcasters for free, and demands virtually
nothing in return.
We have forfeited many of the means of mass communication to concentrated
corporate interests, consigning ourselves to homogenized low-grade entertainment
and lower-grade copy-cat "newstainment" that barely aspires to inform
let alone energize our eroding democracy. The major television networks
are owned by giant conglomerates - General Electric, Disney, Viacom, Fox,
Time Warner. Radio is even worse, with Infinity and Clear Channel dominating
the airwaves.
Yet technology keeps offering us new opportunities to learn from the
past, and ensure that new media deepen our democracy and serve public,
noncommercial interests.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has recently authorized non-commercial
low power FM radio broadcasts. Low power FM (LPFM) has the potential to
strengthen community organization and enrich public life, by permitting
genuinely local broadcasting to serve the needs of local audiences.
Not surprisingly, the powerful National Association of Broadcasters (NAB)
is trying to block LPFM. The NAB hopes to leverage its enormous political
influence to slip a provision to block the FCC's authorization of LPFM
into a "rushed-through-Congress-at the-end-of-the-legislative-year" funding"
bill.
The NAB wants to make sure that grassroots challenges to its dominance
of the airwaves do not emerge.
Right now, if they air regular news at all, most major-market radio stations
do not even produce their own news. Instead, they rely on outside services
that may be thousands of miles from the people that they're supposed to
serve. Some communities aren't represented in media at all: One news director
doesn't bother to cover poor neighborhoods because they "might as well
be in another dimension." Another dimension, he means, from the wealthier
audience the station's sponsors and owners care about.
Low power FM offers the opportunity to offset commercial radio's inadequacies,
decentralize broadcasting and empower neighborhoods and communities. Labor
union locals will be able to broadcast to their members; communities will
have a radio forum to debate and discuss local issues; ethnic groups will
be able to air programming to meet their particular needs, including non-English
broadcasting; senior citizen centers will be able to reach seniors who
cannot make it to the centers' physical facilities; local government meetings
can be broadcast to the community. Under the FCC's plan, 1,000 or more
100-watt stations serving areas with a 3.5 mile radius, plus additional
10-watt stations serving a 1-2 mile radius, could be licensed.
The NAB contends that low power stations will interfere with the quality
of existing stations' sound. But the FCC, which is not known for hostility
to the industry it regulates with kid gloves, has concluded that its licensing
arrangement for LPFM will not cause unacceptable levels of interference
to existing radio stations.
There is every reason to rely on the FCC's assessment rather than the
NAB's. But it comes as no surprise that political decisions in Washington
are often made on factors other than the merits, and there is now a serious
risk that Congress will override the FCC's plan. In the Senate, Senator
Rod Grams, R-Minnesota, has introduced S. 3020, which would drastically
scale back the FCC's plan and is similar to a bill that passed the House
of Representatives in April. Senator Judd Gregg, R-New Hampshire, has
introduced a bill, S.2068, that would eliminate LPFM entirely. The greatest
legislative threat, however, probably is posed by the possibility that
anti-LPFM language will be inserted into a funding bill. That is the kind
of backroom dealmaking in which NAB-style fat-cat lobbyists specialize.
Whether a tiny fragment of the public's airwaves will be returned to
the public for LPFM depends now on whether the public is ready to assert
its interests. Call your senators, and tell them
not to interfere with LPFM. A working democracy requires some public
control of the means of communication.
For more information on LPFM and for breaking legislative news, contact
the Media Access Project at (202) 232-4300, or check their web page at
www.mediaaccess.org.
[Check out an earlier Ralph Nader column
on low power FM]
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