Marin Independent Journal

Bill aims at Ticketmast­er; musicians concerned

- By Andrew Sheeler

A California lawmaker has introduced a bill to take on ticketing giant Ticketmast­er, but some recording artists are warning that the bill will empower ticket scalpers instead.

If signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom, Assembly Bill 2808, by Assemblywo­man Buffy Wicks, D-Oakland, would be the first law of its kind in the nation, the assemblywo­man said at a press conference announcing the bill.

“It is designed to truly transform live event ticketing by increasing competitio­n when tickets go on sale for the first time, the primary point of sale,” Wicks said.

She pointed out that Ticketmast­er controls 80% of primary ticket sales in the U.S., and that since Ticketmast­er merged with LiveNation in 2010, ticket prices have risen 140%.

“The sting of these high prices is made worse by a broken and frustratin­g system in which folks can wait hours to try to get a ticket,” Wicks said.

WIcks said her bill would give consumers more choices when it comes to buying tickets. It would do this by requiring “ticketing enterprise providers” such as Ticketmast­er to enable participat­ing ticket providers to sell both primary and secondary tickets. It also would prohibit any attempt to limit the transfer or resale of tickets, with a fine of up to $2,500 for each violation.

“At the end of the day, it's pretty fundamenta­l. It's a basic premise of capitalism. When you have more competitio­n, you have a better product,” she said.

The bill is supported by the Consumer Federation of California, the California Black Chamber of Commerce, California LULAC and the National Action Network, as well as musician Jay King.

“Whether you're an artist, a venue or a fan, you should have a choice. AB 2808 provides that choice,” King said in a statement.

The bill, set to be heard by the Assembly Arts, Entertainm­ent, Sports and Tourism Committee later this spring, already has opposition.

In response to the bill, Ticketmast­er released the following statement: “We support reforms to improve ticketing, but AB 2808 will not do that. It will instead undermine the efforts of artists, sports teams and primary ticketing companies to minimize ticket scalping. Forcing artists and venues to hand over their intellectu­al property and tickets to secondary sites is a ticket scalper's dream. AB2808 empowers ticket resellers by blocking any and all price control tools artists can employ, including the use of face value exchanges.”

A coalition of groups, including the Recording Industry Associatio­n of

America and SAG-AFTRA, sent a letter of opposition to lawmakers urging a “no” vote on the bill.

“AB 2808 was drafted and introduced without any consultati­on or engagement with artists, venues, or the broader music community. Its primary effect would be to undermine artist control of ticketing for their shows; drive up prices for their fans by outlawing the most successful consumer affordabil­ity tools; and ensure that ticket scalpers, resellers, and illegal bots are able to claim and sell the majority of seats at unchecked, sky-high prices,” the letter reads in part.

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