[opendtv] News: F.C.C. Reshapes Rules Limiting Media Industry
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 19 Dec 2007 08:04:52 -0500
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/19/business/media/19fcc.html?_r=1&th&emc=th&oref=slogin
December 19, 2007
F.C.C. Reshapes Rules Limiting Media Industry
By STEPHEN LABATON
WASHINGTON - The Federal Communications Commission approved two new
rules on Tuesday that are likely to reshape the nation's media
landscape by setting new parameters for the size and scope of the
largest news and cable companies.
One rule would tighten the reins on the cable television industry. By
stipulating that no one company can control more than 30 percent of
the market, the rule introduces fresh regulation to an industry where
there has been little of it, angering both the cable industry and
Republican commissioners, who favor a free-market approach.
The other rule, which gives owners of newspapers more leeway to buy
radio and television stations in the largest cities, is a step in the
direction of deregulation. It is intended to help the newspaper
industry, which is suffering from dwindling advertising revenue, and
to recognize that the historical conditions that gave rise to
cross-ownership restrictions have changed, now that more news sources
are available on the Internet and cable television.
But the change drew criticism from newspaper executives, who said it
was too modest to be meaningful, and from prominent lawmakers and
commission Democrats, who called it a Christmas present to the
nation's largest conglomerates.
Both rules are certain to be reviewed by courts in the coming months.
On Capitol Hill, some lawmakers said Tuesday that they would try to
undo the rule about the newspaper industry.
Nevertheless, the votes were an important political victory for Kevin
J. Martin, the F.C.C. chairman, who presided over a contentious
meeting at which he re-established his control over the deeply
divided agency. Mr. Martin had suffered a sharp setback three weeks
ago when he was unable to find two commissioners to support a plan to
regulate cable television more tightly.
The decisions were a blow to Comcast Communications, the nation's
largest cable company, which has grown substantially over the last
decade through a series of acquisitions and will now be unable to buy
more cable companies unless it can get the order overturned by a
court.
By taking Comcast out of any bidding, the new rule was also a setback
to smaller cable operators thinking of selling to other companies.
As for the relaxation of the newspaper-broadcast rule,
telecommunications lawyers said it could pave the way for Rupert
Murdoch to win permanent waivers to control two television stations
in New York, as well as The New York Post and The Wall Street Journal.
In one 3-to-2 vote on Tuesday, Mr. Martin sided with the agency's two
other Republicans to relax the newspaper-broadcast cross-ownership
rules in the nation's 20 largest markets. Under the new rule, a
company can own both a newspaper and either a television or radio
station in those markets as long as there remain at least eight other
independent sources of news. If it is a television station, the rule
requires that it cannot be one of the top four.
Mr. Martin said that the change was a modest, though vital step
toward assisting the newspaper industry, which is struggling
financially as advertising and readership migrates rapidly to the
Internet. "We cannot ignore the fact the media marketplace is
considerably different than when the media ownership rule was put in
place more than 30 years ago," he said.
In a second 3-to-2 vote, Mr. Martin joined with the two Democratic
commissioners to impose a limit to prevent Comcast, which controls
nearly 30 percent of the market, from getting larger. Mr. Martin has
been critical of the cable television industry for raising rates
faster than the rate of inflation and for failing to offer consumers
enough lower-price choices in subscription packages.
In a series of dissents, the commissioners took issue with Mr.
Martin's assessments.
"In the final analysis," said Michael J. Copps, a Democratic
commissioner who has led a nationwide effort against relaxing the
media ownership rules, "the real winners today are businesses that
are in many cases quite healthy, and the real losers are going to be
all of us who depend on the news media to learn what's happening in
our communities and to keep an eye on local government."
Robert M. McDowell, a Republican commissioner, was sharply critical
of the cable restrictions.
"The cap is out of date, is bad public policy and is not needed in
today's public market," he said. He called the cable rule "archaic
industrial policy" that would surely be struck down by an appeals
court, as a similar rule was six years ago.
Although Mr. Martin appears to have won a high-stakes battle over
some of the most significant policy decisions of his tenure, he has
expended significant political capital and made political enemies of
powerful industry groups and influential lawmakers.
For opposite reasons, both rules approved on Tuesday were sharply
criticized by industry. John F, Sturm, president of the Newspaper
Association of America, called the new cross-ownership rule "a baby
step in the actions needed to maintain the vitality of local news, in
print and over-the-air, in all communities across the nation." Mr.
Sturm said he favored eliminating the cross-ownership ban completely.
On the other hand, the cable television industry accused Mr. Martin
of once again imposing unfair regulations on it.
David L. Cohen, an executive vice president of Comcast, said it was
"perverse to see the commission approving huge mergers by the Bell
companies while now telling cable companies, who compete toe-to-toe
with the Bells, that they may not also grow larger and achieve the
same efficiencies."
Over the last year, the commission has approved a series of proposals
over the objections of the cable television industry. Last December,
it approved a measure to force municipalities to accelerate the local
approval process for the telephone companies to offer video services
in new markets. And two months ago, it struck down thousands of
contracts that gave individual cable companies exclusive rights to
provide service to apartment buildings.
Consumer groups, which have long pushed for tighter cable television
regulation, criticized the change in newspaper cross-ownership.
"We're disappointed that he relaxed the rule," said Gene Kimmelman,
the senior lobbyist in Washington for Consumers Union. "But the new
language creating a high hurdle in the small markets, if
appropriately implemented, could significantly limit the number of
mergers that get through, minimizing the danger to competition and
diversity in local news."
A significant chorus in Congress has been deeply critical of Mr.
Martin and repeatedly requested that he delay action on the media
ownership vote. On Monday, 25 senators led by Senator Byron Dorgan,
Democrat of North Dakota, sent Mr. Martin a letter in which they
vowed to take legislative action to revoke any new rule or nullify
Tuesday's vote.
But in a letter to lawmakers from Commerce Secretary Carlos M.
Gutierrez, the administration expressed support for Mr. Martin.
Both the newspaper-broadcast ownership rule and the cable rule are
certain to be reviewed by federal appeals courts. Three years ago, a
federal appeals panel in Philadelphia struck down a series of
deregulatory measures proposed by Mr. Martin's predecessor, Michael
K. Powell, including one that loosened the cross-ownership rules.
Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company
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