December 2005

The Digital Homestead Act

[Commentary] In the best government giveaway since cheese handouts from the Reagan Administration, Congress has voted to provide consumers $40 vouchers to buy digital-to-analog converter boxes. Essentially, Congress is budgeting $1.5 billion for millions of Americans who don't need the money -- so that they can keep using obsolete technology. Moreover, most people won't notice a change in 2009. They will already have digital TVs (all new sets sold after mid-2007 must be digital), or they will still be subscribing to cable or satellite services that can send digital signals even to analog TVs. One universally acknowledged truth -- even in Congress -- is that the people who gobble up many of those vouchers will not be needy. Millions of households with satellite dishes and new big-screen TVs also have at least one old analog set lying around, and each family is entitled to two $40 vouchers. As we learned when many of the non-poor joined long queues for Reagan cheese, Americans would stand in line for marmoset pelts if they were labeled "free." To encourage such grabbiness in 2009, Congress has earmarked $5 million for voucher advertising. Mark your calendars.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113530781228130250.html?mod=todays_us_we...
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* NAB Statement on DTV Legislation
http://www.nab.org/newsroom/pressrel/statements/122105_Sen_Budget_Recon_...
* TIA Urges Final Passage of DTV Legislation
http://www.tiaonline.org/media/press_releases/index.cfm?parelease=05-93
* Diverse Group of High-Tech Leaders Urge Lawmakers To Finalize DTV Legislation
http://www.ntca.org/ka/ka-3.cfm?content_item_id=3904&folder_id=522

The Digital Frontier

[Commentary] Congress has risked irking US couch potatoes by setting an end date for analog TV broadcasts. Why? Because the auction of returned analog TV spectrum will rake in billions and some spectrum could be put to use by emergency workers. Washington should not let the quest for revenue override a more fundamental goal: making affordable high-speed Internet service available to all Americans. If the high bidders in the auctions are affiliated with the local telephone and cable companies that already offer high-speed Internet service, they're not likely to use the airwaves for a cheaper version of broadband. Similarly, the high bidders might be more interested in offering movies to cellphones than a fat pipe to the Web. That's why Washington should leave some of the reclaimed frequencies open to the public without need for lease or license. With the right technologies and rules to guard against interference, these airwaves could not only enable community-based high-speed Internet services, but provide a laboratory for wireless innovation. By opening a few slivers of the spectrum to unlicensed wireless data services in 1986, the FCC made possible an explosion in Wi-Fi, or wireless fidelity, communication gear and services that continues to this day. The reclaimed analog TV frequencies hold even more promise. Rather than mining every bit for auction revenue, lawmakers should reserve some of the airwaves for whatever services and applications that innovative technologists and community groups can squeeze into them.
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/opinion/la-ed-digital23dec23,1,...
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A Holiday Gift from Congress

Congress gave public broadcasting an early holiday gift with the passage of the conference report on the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and related agencies appropriations bill. The conference report contains solid funding for public broadcasting programs.

Education takes $59M hit in new federal budget

[SOURCE: eSchool News, AUTHOR: Corey Murray]

Iowans Petition To Deny KGAN License Renewal

[SOURCE: Broadcasting&Cable, AUTHOR: Allison Romano]

Clear Channel Drops Local Public Affairs in DC

[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Marc Fisher]
This week, Clear Channel Communications, which owns eight D.C. stations, shut down its public affairs department and let Jerry Phillips go, eliminating what some local charities called their main link to the public. "We're taking a new direction," said Bennett Zier, Clear Channel's regional vice president. "Jerry is moving on." Zier said his stations, which currently have no news staff, will add "personality-based news for our morning shows," including some public affairs content.

FCC Nominees Approved As Senate Leaves For Year

[SOURCE: CongressDaily, AUTHOR: Drew Clark]

In Small Markets, Community Paper is Leading News Source

[SOURCE: Editor&Publisher]
While circulation of the biggest dailies continues its long decline, a new study finds that 81% of adults in small markets read a newspaper every week, and 50% say the local paper is their primary news source. According to the survey, the local paper is by far the leading news source in these markets. Fifty percent of respondents listed the local newspaper as their "primary source of information about local communities." That was followed by television at 16%; radio, 9%; and Internet, 2%

Agenda at FCC Depends On Powers of Persuasion

[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Arshad Mohammed]

Reports Explore Treatment Of Contested Spectrum

[SOURCE: Technology Daily, AUTHOR: Drew Clark]