[opendtv] News: 491 TV Stations Want To Keep Feb. 17 DTV Transition Date
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 12 Feb 2009 08:38:07 -0500
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/173976-491_TV_Stations_Want_To_Keep_Feb_17_DTV_Transition_Date.php
491 TV Stations Want To Keep Feb. 17 DTV Transition Date
Another 190 have already switched or are doing so before Feb. 17
By John Eggerton -- Broadcasting & Cable, 2/10/2009 3:15:43 PM MT
Between a quarter and a third of all TV stations want to go ahead and
pull the plug on analog Feb. 17, which could make for what is
effectively a staggered start to the DTV era, depending on how many
the FCC allows to go on that date.
A total of 491 TV stations have told the FCC they want to make the
transition to digital Feb. 17, according to a just-released list from
the commission.
Another 190 have already switched or are doing so before Feb. 17.
It is now up to the FCC to let stations know whether they can or not.
Any station the FCC decides can't go early--because it is not in the
public interest--will get the news "promptly," says the commission's
public notice, but it does not give a date certain for informing
stations. It will have to be prompt, since even if the FCC lets them
know today (Feb. 10), they have only one week to change their plans.
Congress has passed a bill to extend the hard date to June 12, though
the president has yet to sign it, which has some in the media and
regulatory camps scratching their heads, since the administration was
pushing for quick passage of the bill given the looming deadline.
The FCC has already released the rules implementing the bill (not yet
a law), with language that finesses it in case something happened to
prevent its signing. That's because the FCC could not wait for the
president's signature and meet the deadline.
It had required broadcasters to tell it by midnight Monday whether
they wanted to go ahead with the Feb. 17 cut-off of analog the
government had mandated before unmandating it last week.
There is no guarantee they will be able to to go early, however, even
the 1,000-plus stations the FCC has said could make the move without
interfering with other stations.
That is because the FCC has put a public interest caveat on the move,
saying they will have to look at it on a case-by-case basis. For
example, the FCC would think twice before allowing all the major
stations in a market with a high percentage of analog-only wiewers to
pull the plug Feb. 17.
The FCC and some members of Congress have urged stations to do their
own public interest accounting of the effects of going early, which
Feb. 17 now is, and act accordingly.
A number of major groups, including Fox, NBC, CBS, ABC and Gannett
stations have said they won't go early, while others have said for
economic or scheduling reasons they have to go when the government
has been telling them for years they needed to.
"We'll try to work with broadcasters to make this as seamless as
possible for everybody," says FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell, "but
we do need to protect consumers, and part of that is to make sure
that there is some analog signal in each market." Some broadcasters
may wind up having to stay on even if they don't want to. "That
remains to be seen," he said," but hopefully it will all be
voluntary."
One broadcast executive surmised that the 491 stations was far higher
than the FCC had expected, and predicted that the FCC will be "taking
stations to task" over any noncompliance with the details for going
early, which include an extremely accelerated and condensed schedule
of PSAs and crawls informing viewers of that fact.
The executive noted that there was no way for many stations,
including his, to run automated crawls. He said that while having to
file the request to go early was not a big cost, he is concerned
about the legal costs if he fails to meet the FCC's regimen for
alerting viewers to a Feb. 17 cut-off.
He joked that since Monday is a federal holiday, "a lot of us are
expecting to hear from the FCC at 4:59 on Friday the 13th that we can
[or can't] go."
There is an even greater urgency to the promptness in the FCC's
notification of stations.
According to the FCC's own rules implementing the date change, any
station that wants to go early has to start airing a crawl every five
minutes of every hour starting at 11:59 p.m. tonight (Feb. 10). If
the FCC does not inform the stations it won't be allowing to make
that move within the next few hours, some may be informing viewers
they are going Feb. 17 when they are not.
That may well be the case. "It's better that people be overprepared
than underprepared," said FCC spokesman Mark Wigfield.
Glen Dickson contributed to this story.
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