[opendtv] news: NTIA Officially Announces Viewers Can Reapply for Converter Box Coupons That Expired
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, DVD SIG <dvdlist@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 08:19:23 -0400
http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/190598-NTIA_Officially_Announces_Viewers_Can_Reapply_for_Converter_Box_Coupons_That_Expired.php?nid=2228&source=title&rid=5250536
NTIA Officially Announces Viewers Can Reapply for Converter Box
Coupons That Expired
Administration says by middle of next week all 4 million requests on
waiting list will be filed
By John Eggerton -- Broadcasting & Cable, 3/24/2009 9:37:34 AM MT
As reported earlier by B&C, the National Telecommunications &
Information Administration announced Tuesday that viewers can now
reapply for their expired DTV-to-analog converter box subsidy
coupons--up to two, $40 coupons per household.
NTIA also said that by the middle of next week, all 4 million coupon
requests that had been on a waiting list should have been filled.
So far, NTIA has spent about $190 million to clear out that waiting
list and start allowing viewers to reapply for coupons that had
expired. The agency has also modified the system to cut the time for
getting the coupons after requesting them from three weeks to nine
days, and is ready to prioritize requests from over-the-air
households if another waiting list is necessary.
NTIA got $650 million in the economic stimulus package. Of that, $90
million can be used for outreach, including money for the FCC to
continue its boots-on-the-ground assistance in local markets and its
call center effort, and another $70 million for administrative costs,
leaving $490 million for the coupons, of which NTIA has used 39% so
far.
Acting NTIA chief Anna Gomezand and Dr. Bernadette McGuire-Rivera,
associate administrator of NTIA's Office of Telecommunications and
Information Applications, who held a press conference Tuesday to talk
about the program, were asked whether they thought the program could
run out of money again. Gomez said NTIA would focus on analog-only
households unprepared for the transition and, if need be, create
another waiting list and prioritize those households if there was a
surge and possibility they might reach their funding limit.
If all 17 million-plus expired coupon requests were reapplied for, it
would take more than $680 million to fill them.
NTIA's news, telegraphed by the National Association of Broadcasters
earlier Tuesday, comes two days before the House Communications,
Technology & Internet subcommittee is scheduled to hold an oversight
hearing on the state of the DTV transition.
Asked about the possibility of a downloadable coupon, McGuire-Rivera
said that based on research they had done so far, "that doesn't seem
like a mechanism that would be widely used by [the 4 million unready
analog-only homes]...so that might not justify whatever cost it would
be to set that up."
She said that NTIA was looking at other ways to get to that group, at
least to inform them better. And while seniors remain a target
population, it turns out young people need help, too. "We discovered
in our research there are a lot of young families, young people,
18-34," said McGuire-Rivera. "They seem to text a lot. We're looking
at that as maybe a way to get to them."
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