roundtable: PEG Access Wins with HR 1555
roundtable: PEG Access Wins with HR 1555
PEG Access Wins with HR 1555
AllianceCM@aol.com
Fri, 4 Aug 1995 18:53:45 -0400
Date: Fri, 4 Aug 1995 18:53:45 -0400
From: AllianceCM@aol.com
Message-Id: <950804185344_48160659@aol.com>
To: ROUNDTABLE@cni.org
Subject: PEG Access Wins with HR 1555
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
AUGUST 4, 1995
CONTACT: BARRY FORBES (202) 393-2650
PASSAGE OF HOUSE TELECOMMUNICATIONS BILL PROVIDES PARTIAL VICTORY FOR
SCHOOLS, CITIES, AND NON-PROFIT COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS
Schools, local communities, and non-profit organizations today won small
but important victories in the U.S. House of Representatives as H.R.
1555, "The Communications Act of 1995," passed on a vote of 305 to 117.
The bill aims to open up local and long-distance telephone, cable
television, broadcasting, equipment manufacturing, and electronic
publishing markets to competition.
In addition to allowing telephone companies and cable operators to enter
each others' businesses, the House bill ensures that non-commercial,
non-profit Public, Educational and Governmental ("PEG") access cable
television centers will share in the tremendous growth of the "information
superhighway." The bill would require that all forms of wireline video
delivery services, whether built by cable or telephone companies, would
generally be required to provide educational, governmental, and public
(PEG) access when local governments request it. Specific regulatory
guidelines would be left to the Federal Communications Commission to
develop and monitor.
Barry Forbes, Executive Director of the Alliance for Community Media
stated, "I am extremely gratified that the U.S. House of Representatives
has, in effect, endorsed television distance learning programs, local
C-SPAN-like coverage, and the programming produced by churches,
synagogues, YMCAs, Chambers of Commerce, United Way agencies, local
political candidates, theater groups and civic organizations. One of
the great untold stories of the past few decades is the tremendous
success of PEG access," Forbes stated. "In the communities where it
exists, it has served as classroom, Town Hall, Community Bulletin Board,
and auditorium. In light of the recent purchases of CBS by Westinghouse
and ABC by Disney, we're somewhat comforted that Congress will allow
public access to at least one lane on the so-called 'information
superhighway,'" continued Forbes. "PEG access centers produce more
than 20,000 hours of programming each week -- that's more than CBS,
NBC, ABC, Fox, and PBS combined. This programming is produced by our
teachers, our local leaders, and our friends and neighbors in our own
communities, rather than dreamed up by the marketing department of a
light bulb company or cartoon distributor."
The Alliance also supported three floor amendments to H.R. 1555, two of
which passed. An amendment introduced by Rep. Bart Stupak (D-MI) and
Rep. Joe Barton (R-TX), which would give local governments continuing
authority to manage their local rights-of-way, passed on a vote of 338-86.
Another amendment, introduced by Rep. Edward Markey (D-MA) and Rep. Ron
Klink (D-PA), would preserve current limitations on the number of media
outlets a company may own in any single media market, and on the
percentage of the total American broadcast market that can be entered
by a single broadcast owner. This amendment passed on a vote of 228-195.
An amendment proposed by Rep. Markey and Rep. Chris Shays (R-CT) to
maintain currently codified cable rate regulation was defeated on a
vote of 148-275.
As passed, H.R. 1555 provides that PEG center programming will be carried
on so-called "video dialtone" networks to the same extent that they are
currently available on cable systems. "Video dialtone" is similar to
cable in that it would provide video programming over coaxial or fiber-
optic wirelines. Unlike cable, where programming is selected exclusively
by the cable operating company, video dialtone channel capacity would
have to be offered to any person or entity that wanted it. Some of the
Regional Bell Operating Companies have already begun testing, or are
planning to test, video dialtone systems in various markets around the
country, while other Regional Bells have jettisoned video dialtone
altogether in favor of traditional cable systems.
"With this provision in the bill, we are looking forward to tremendous
growth in PEG center use," commented Forbes. "As the number of
subscribers to wireline television services increases, more people will
see what they like on PEG access and want to be a part of it. Already,
many of our PEG access centers are becoming full-service "community media
centers" where people without equipment can get low-cost access to a wide
range of telecommunications services. This includes internet services
and electronic databases, as well as television programming production.
We are pleased that many members of the House share this vision of the
future."
Public, educational and governmental access centers on cable television
have existed since the inception of the cable industry in the mid-1960's.
Local access -- and the equipment, services and facilities to make such
access meaningful -- is often requested by local franchising authorities
as partial compensation for use of the local community's rights-of-way --
the land underneath streets, highways and parks. Congress federalized
local franchising procedures in the 1984 Cable Act, giving local
communities express authority to ask for PEG access as part of a local
franchise. Since then, PEG access on cable television has spread
throughout the country. In communities with no local broadcast station,
the PEG center is often the only local programming outlet. These centers
have been key in providing residents of these smaller markets with news,
educational and public affairs programming.
The bill now goes to the House-Senate conference, where the leadership
will try and resolve the differences between it the Senate's version,
S. 652. The Alliance will be working to retain the House provisions
regarding PEG access and jettison the weaker Senate PEG access provision,
which would offer lower-cost access rates, without equipment, facilities
or services, to a selected number of PEG centers. The Alliance will also
continue its work with a broad range of education, non-profit, religious,
and other public interest groups to ensure that schools, libraries,
public health clinics, and other non-profit entities are not prohibited
by cost from having full access to the "information superhighway."
"We still have a number of significant concerns about the bill," Forbes
said, "such as the fact that it substantially deregulates cable prices
before any meaningful competition develops, makes cable service complaint
procedures almost impossible to initiate, provides no non-profit or
educational access to advanced telecommunications services, and gives
new broadcast spectrum to currently-licensed broadcast stations without
any allocation to public, non-profit, or non-commercial uses. We are
hopeful that some of these problems will be fixed in the more reflective
atmosphere of the Conference Committee."
The Alliance for Community Media is a national, non-profit membership
organization committed to assuring everyone's access to electronic media.
The Alliance accomplishes this by disseminating public information,
advancing a positive legislative and regulatory environment, building
coalitions, and supporting local organizing. Founded in 1976, the
Alliance represents the interests of over 950 public, educational and
governmental ("PEG") access organizations and local origination cable
services throughout the country. The Alliance also represents the
interests of local religious, community, charitable and other
organizations throughout the country who utilize PEG access channels
and facilities to speak to their memberships and their larger
communities.
-- 30 --
_________________________________________________
Alliance for Community Media
666 11th Street, NW, Suite 806
Washington, DC 20001-4542
Voice: (202) 393-2650
Fax: (202) 393-2653
"Ensuring everyone's access to electronic media
since 1976."
_________________________________________________
<alliancecm@aol.com>