FCC Challenged On Media Consolidation
Studies Say Easing Media Ownership Rules Would Hurt Programming Diversity
-
(CBS/AP)
-
Interactive History Of Press Freedom Follow the evolving struggles over press freedom in the United States.
Reports released Monday by two public interest groups, the Benton Foundation and the Social Science Research Council, challenged the
Federal Communications Commission's argument that media consolidation would improve local coverage and programming due to synergy effects.
The FCC is reviewing the issue following a failed 2003 attempt to loosen media ownership restrictions.
"These studies make clear that there is no support for the contention that media consolidation correlates with better, more local or more diverse media content," said Gloria Tristani, a former FCC commissioner and president of the Benton Foundation.
The FCC in June reopened the hotly disputed issue of ownership limits, including the number of radio and television stations that one owner can have and restrictions on cross-ownership between newspapers and broadcasters.
Former FCC Chairman Michael Powell pushed through loosened rules in 2003, but a federal appeals court threw them out on grounds that the FCC compiled an insufficient record to justify them.
The 2003 changes would have let one corporation own — in a single community — up to three TV stations, eight radio stations, the cable system, the only daily newspaper and the biggest Internet provider, according to Democratic commissioners who opposed the plan.
According to the studies released Monday:
Many of the broadcast television networks and large media companies including the Tribune Co., Gannett Co. and the New York Times Co. have supported loosened rules, saying current restrictions are outmoded in a digital age in which consumers also have the Internet and cable TV to choose from.
The FCC has scheduled several hearings and allowed 120 days for public comment, which expires Monday. Current FCC Chairman Kevin Martin has supported eliminating the three-decade-old flat ban on cross-ownership.
The fate of media ownership proposals could be determined in part by the November congressional elections.
A switch to Democratic control in the House would likely hamper any attempts to let media conglomerates own more TV stations. In the Senate, Democrats such as John Kerry of Massachusetts and Barack Obama of Illinois — two possible 2008 presidential contenders — have called on the agency to consider diversity when reviewing ownership rules.
The FCC and its staff declined to predict how long the review process will take. The agency held its first public hearing in Los Angeles earlier this month.
©MMVI The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- monolithic media the neocons dream, there will be no dissent. so if you can own the tv, broadband, the newspaper, radio, and tap the phones of anyone without recourse you will be sure all those internal terrorists can be dissappeared like any banna republic. turn in that pesky neighbor today! why wait.
- Reply to this comment
Mike Huckabee on GOP "rock stars," 2012, health care reform and more.




