Houston Chronicle

Supreme Court backs FCC’s easing of local media ownership limits

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Thursday unanimousl­y upheld federal regulators’ decision to ease ownership limits on local media, rejecting a claim that the change would hurt minority and female ownership.

The court said the Federal Communicat­ions Commission acted reasonably in 2017 when it modified rules predating the internet.

The old rules prohibited a single entity from owning a radio or TV station and a daily newspaper in the same media market. They also limited how many radio and TV stations one company could own in a single market and restricted the number of TV stations a company could operate in one media market.

“The FCC considered the record evidence on competitio­n, localism, viewpoint diversity, and minority and female ownership, and reasonably concluded that the three ownership rules no longer serve the public interest,” Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote for the court.

The decision comes as newspaper and broadcasti­ng industries say they need the changes to deal with growing competitio­n from the internet and cable companies.

The FCC adopted the changes on a party-line, 3-2 vote, with three Republican-appointed commission­ers in the majority. The dissenting Democratic appointees and other critics said the changes would encourage consolidat­ion and hurt diversity.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if this decision opens the floodgates to more consolidat­ion for media conglomera­tes. But that doesn’t mean the FCC has to approve every merger that comes knocking on its door,” said Yosef Getachew, Media & Democracy Program director for Common Cause.

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