Last updated: July 11, 2008 - 9:12am
A coalition of media reform, consumer and public interest groups -- representing millions of Americans across the country -- issued the following statement in response to a draft telecommunications bill circulated by the House on Thursday:
The introduction of a House discussion draft of a telecommunications reform bill should be the first step in an open and transparent legislative process that involves the public in meaningful ways.
Telecommunications policy affects every American family in ways that determine their access to information, how much they pay for it, and even the quality and diversity of that information.
The undersigned groups, representing millions of Americans throughout the country, believe that Congress must hold public hearings throughout the U.S. and seriously listen to the needs and priorities of citizens.
Telecommunications legislation has for too long been negotiated behind closed doors with key industry heavyweights and major media conglomerates, which spend hundreds of millions of dollars on campaign contributions and lobbying in Washington.
The last major telecommunications bill enacted in 1996 largely reflected their priorities, and did not respond to the needs of the public. Since then, cable rates surged by more than 50 percent, local phone rates went up by 20 percent, and scores of media companies merged, denying consumers choice and competition, and depriving our democracy of diverse viewpoints. These mistakes should not be repeated. (See the Common Cause report at http://www.commoncause.org/atf/cf/%7bFB3C17E2-CDD1-4DF6-92BE-BD4429893665%7d/FALLOUT_FROM_THE_TELECOMM_ACT_5-9-05.PDF )
As it begins consideration of telecommunications reform legislation, Congress should make telecommunications policy based on a number of core values:
Equal access, regardless of race, income, ethnicity or location, to affordable, advanced telecommunications technologies;
The importance of ensuring that franchising agreements protect consumers, extend the benefits of competition to underserved communities, provide adequate compensation to local governments for use of public resources, provide for public access media, and flexibly address community needs;
The right of local governments to use broadband technology to serve their residents, particularly those with low incomes or in rural areas;
Enforceable guarantees that network owners will not interfere with content transmitted over the network or discriminate against any device, application or program run on the network;
Enforceable guarantees that unaffiliated, independent video programmers will have access to video platforms;
Locally owned, independent media outlets that provide a diversity of viewpoints;
Expanded allocation of valuable public airwaves for shared, open use by local communities, commercial innovators and individual citizens.
In the coming days and weeks, we will be pressing Congress on all these and related issues. The public can no longer be ignored in this crucial policy debate.
Action Coalition for Media Education (ACME)
Alliance for Community Media
Benton Foundation
CCTV Center for Media and Democracy
Center for Creative Voices in Media
Center for Digital Democracy
Chicago Media Action
Citizens for Independent Public Broadcasting
Common Cause
Consumer Federation of America
Consumers Union
Free Press
Future of Music Coalition
Media Access Project
Media Alliance
Media Tank
National Association of Telecommunications Officers and Advisors
National Hispanic Media Coalition
New America Foundation
Office of Communication of the United Church of Christ, Inc
Reclaim the Media
U.S. Public Interest Research Group
Links to Sources
Related
- Ford Foundation Grant to Reform Media Landscape
- Telecom Reform Legislation
- H.R._ House Commerce Comittee Draft of Telecom Reform Bill
- Barton Issues FCC Reform Draft Bill
- COPE Day
- Big Apple Says Franchise Bills Bite
- SaveAccess Coalition Says COPE Harms Communities, Consumers, and Citizens
- S.2686 the Communications, Consumer's Choice, and Broadband Deployment Act of 2006
- H. R. 5252 Communications Opportunity, Promotion, and Enhancement Act of 2006
- Groups warn Congress of dangers of COPE bill on the Internet
- Recap: FCC Process Reform Hearing
- Civil Rights On Demand
- Chairman Martin's Press Conference 4.24.08
- Civil Rights, Privacy, and Consumer Organizations Call on the FCC to Adopt Key Goals of National Broadband Plan
- Latest House Telecom Draft Bill Tilts More Toward Bell Companies
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

