The Oklahoman

FCC relaxes old limits on media ownership

- BY TALI ARBEL AP Technology Writer

NEW YORK — Federal regulators have weakened rules meant to support independen­t local media.

Now, one company can own newspapers and broadcast stations in one market, undoing a ban in place since 1975. Thursday’s decision by the Federal Communicat­ions Commission also makes it easier for one company to own two broadcast TV stations in one market and coordinate operations with stations owned by others.

Although the changes won’t affect AT&T’s pending bid for Time Warner and its cable channels, they come as cable and phone companies have grown into industry giants through acquisitio­ns. The newspaper and broadcasti­ng industries say they need the changes to deal with growing competitio­n from the web and cable companies.

The Republican-dominated FCC approved the changes in a 3-2 vote along party lines. The two Democratic commission­ers and other critics say that dumping these rules, by encouragin­g consolidat­ion, hurts media diversity. Free Press, a group that opposes media mergers, said Thursday that it will challenge the rule changes in court.

“This act will pave the way for massive broadcast conglomera­tes to increasing­ly provide local viewers with nationaliz­ed cookiecutt­er news and corporate propaganda that’s produced elsewhere,” said Sen. Bill Nelson, a Florida Democrat. The FCC previously granted exceptions for companies such as News Corp., owner of Fox News, to own both a newspaper and a radio or TV station in the same market. Scrapping the rule would let more companies do so without needing to make the case for an exception.

The FCC is also loosening restrictio­ns on one company owning two TV stations in the same market. TV station owner Sinclair is expected to benefit from these changes. It has a pending deal for rival Tribune Media that regulators still must clear. They both own TV stations that air local news and programmin­g from the major networks, ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox, around the country.

The Sinclair deal has drawn criticism from an unusual coalition: consumer advocacy groups that generally oppose media consolidat­ion, con- servative media companies that are rivals to the rightleani­ng Sinclair and cable and satellite TV companies that worry that a beefedup Sinclair will be able to get even higher fees from them. The rule changes, however, would not apply to AT&T and Time Warner because the FCC is not reviewing that and neither company owns a TV or radio station or a local paper. The Justice Department is still reviewing that $85 billion deal. Its widely expected approval has run into hurdles.

The FCC has already taken steps favorable to broadcaste­rs and Sinclair. It scrapped a rule that required TV and radio broadcaste­rs to maintain a local studio and withdrew a technical measure that hindered media consolidat­ion. Sinclair would reach 72 percent of American households if the Tribune Media deal goes through.

The FCC also voted Thursday to allow a new broadcasti­ng standard known as “next-gen TV,” which Sinclair and the broadcasti­ng lobby has pushed for. It will allow for better-quality video and improved reception, let broadcaste­rs beam TV programmin­g directly to phones and, they hope, make money from advertisin­g targeted to consumers based on data about them, like Facebook and Google do.

The two Democratic commission­ers dissented, saying the agency’s approach will mean higher costs for consumers if they have to buy new TV sets to get the signals, just as they had to buy digital TVs or converters when analog transmissi­ons ceased in the past decade. The government offered $40 coupons for converter boxes to help defray costs during that transition. According to the Democrats, there are no provisions for similar subsidies this time.

The agency also voted Thursday on party lines to pursue new limits on Lifeline, a program that makes internet service cheaper for the poor and serves about 12 million people. The FCC also made it easier for phone companies like AT&T and Verizon to ditch their old copper networks as they upgrade to newer technologi­es. Democrats say these measures will make it more difficult for poor people to go online and harm rural customers who depend on their landlines.

 ?? [AP FILE PHOTOS] ?? On Thursday, the FCC voted to loosen rules meant to support independen­t local media. The newspaper and broadcasti­ng industries say they need the changes to deal with growing competitio­n from the web and cable companies. Critics say dumping these rules,...
[AP FILE PHOTOS] On Thursday, the FCC voted to loosen rules meant to support independen­t local media. The newspaper and broadcasti­ng industries say they need the changes to deal with growing competitio­n from the web and cable companies. Critics say dumping these rules,...
 ??  ?? FCC Commission­er Ajit Pai
FCC Commission­er Ajit Pai

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