NAB Unveils Quiet-Time Proposal
The National Association of Broadcasters' board of directors announced that it will put a four-week stop on negotiating retransmission-consent agreements around the time of the digital conversion, scheduled for February 17, 2009. The board is asking members to voluntarily commit "to make available to all of their distribution partners those broadcast signals being provided as of Feb. 4, 2009, through March 4, 2009," two weeks after the conversion. In practical terms, the NAB wants to make sure that any station or station group in dispute with a cable, satellite, or telco distributor over retransmission issues suspend hostile action, like refusing to permit the distributor to show the station, while the digital conversion is near or in its first weeks. By law, stations can't be removed from a distributors system during a sweeps period, so that extends the NAB quiet period for virtually the entire month of March. Some in the cable industry, including the American Cable Association and cable operator Mediacom Communications, asked for a longer quiet period than the one the NAB proposed Tuesday, suggesting that it begin in January 2009 and extend until May 31. The ACA said earlier that thousands of retrans agreements expire in December. ACA president Matt Polka said in a statement that while he "welcomes" the initiative, a start date of Feb. 4 "is simply too late and will not go far enough to protect consumers whose signals could be pulled by broadcasters before Feb. 4." He reiterated the ACA's original January-May quiet period.
NAB Unveils Quiet-Time Proposal NAB press release NAB: Retrans Won't Affect DTV Transition (tvnewsday) Broadcasters Vow to Protect DTV Transition (MediaWeek) NAB Seeks Four-Week Quiet Period Around DTV Switch (TVWeek) ACA Opposed To NAB's Quiet Period Dates (Multichannel News)