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Prometheus Press Center
Facing Criticism, F.C.C Is Thinking Local
By JACQUES STEINBERG, New York Times
August 21, 2003 -- With his bid to ease media ownership rules under assault from members of Congress worried by the prospect of greater consolidation, Michael K. Powell, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, said yesterday that he would create a task force to study the
"localism" of radio and television stations.
Mr. Powell said that the panel, which will begin meeting next month,
would seek to answer such questions as how many hours stations
already devote to local issues and "what was the nature and the
quality of that local news," with a goal of increasing such coverage.
In a related move, he said the F.C.C. would expedite the approval of
hundreds of applications from churches, community groups, schools and
other nonprofit organizations seeking permission to operate low-power
FM stations. According to the commission, there are about 220 such
stations, each limited to no more than 100 watts and reaching only a
few miles.
The commission said it had already granted construction permits to 530
additional low-power stations, which is the first step in the
licensing. It has yet to take action on the applications of more than
1,200 others.
But the initiatives, announced by Mr. Powell at a news conference that
he convened at the commission's headquarters in Washington, did little
to sway opponents of the F.C.C.'s decision to ease the rules on media
ownership.
"This proposal is a day late and a dollar short," Michael J. Copps, a
commissioner who has been an outspoken opponent of Mr. Powell's
efforts, said in a statement. "We should have vetted these issues
before we voted."
The commission and lawmakers have received hundreds of thousands of
complaints since June, after the F.C.C.'s 3-to-2 vote to make it
easier for media companies to buy more television stations and to own
multiple newspapers and TV stations in the same market.
In response to those complaints, the House of Representatives voted
overwhelmingly last month to block a commission rule that would
permit a single company to own TV stations that reach 45 percent of the
nation's households. Under the previous rule, a company's
stations were allowed to reach 35 percent.
Because a similar measure has strong support in the Senate, the issue
will probably reach the desk of President Bush. The administration has
generally supported Mr. Powell's efforts but would have to decide
whether to veto any Congressional action.
While acknowledging that there was "a deep-seated anxiety in the
American public about a commitment to local values and local
communities," Mr. Powell did not waver yesterday in his support of the
new regulations. He said that the task force, with its
examination of the local performance of television stations, would be
proceeding on a separate track than the effort to ease ownership
rules.
"We heard the voice of public concern loud and clear," Mr. Powell said,
"that localism remains a core concern of our public, and thus, I think
it is time the commission address it head on."
He said the task force would make recommendations to the commission, as
well as to Congress, on "how the commission can promote localism in
television and radio."
Nonetheless, he said that he remained skeptical of the notion that "the
only way you can serve a local community is by having a small station
in a local community owned by a local owner."
Senator Byron L. Dorgan, a Democrat from North Dakota and one of the
leaders in the Senate seeking repeal of the new ownership
regulations, said that Mr. Powell's comments yesterday had failed to
persuade him of the commission's sensitivity to local concerns.
"It is a very curious strategy for the chairman to change the rules in
a way that will dramatically damage localism and then, nearly
three months later, propose a process to examine how those rules
might affect localism," Mr. Dorgan said in a statement.
Executives at several of the broadcast networks, while welcoming Mr.
Powell's inquiry, said they were confident he would find that their
stations are sensitive to the needs of viewers on local matters.
"To suggest that a station aligned with a network is less in touch with
its community is mistaken," said Linda Sullivan, the president and
general manager of KNTV in San Jose, which is owned by NBC.
"Building and fostering that viewer relationship is our daily focus."
For supporters of low-power radio, whose efforts at expansion have been
opposed by some of the nation's biggest broadcasters, Mr.
Powell's remarks were greeted with cautious optimism.
"We have low-power FM's that have been waiting three years to hear from
the F.C.C., without so much as a postcard," said Pete Tridish,
technical director for the Prometheus Radio Project, a Philadelphia
group that builds such stations and advocates on their behalf. "This is
a very small step in the right direction."
Mr. Powell has repeatedly defended the ownership regulations as
balanced, and affording ample protections for a diversity of
viewpoints in an era in which some viewers can choose among more than
500 cable channels.
Mr. Powell said at several points in the news conference that he did
not view the decision to appoint a task force on local concerns to be a
political one.
When pressed about the timing of his announcement, in the midst of the
Congressional outcry over media consolidation, Mr. Powell said: "Why
now? Because we are constantly working to try to find the best and most
constructive way to serve our public."
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