Home
About
Get Involved
Store
Library
Tech Support
Find Stations
Barn Raisings
Calendar
Take Action
Photo: JJ Tiziou
Home arrow Round Two, Media Ownership
  • Our Issues
  • Low Power Radio
  • Media Ownership
  • Spectrum Reform
  • International
  • Full Power Radio
Enter the gallery
switchon

switchon

Latest Events
There are no upcoming events currently scheduled.
View Full Calendar
Search the Prometheus site:
Can't find it on the new site?
Look for it on the old site: oldsite.prometheusradio.org!
Translate the site:
Main | Clear Channel | Prometheus vs. the FCC | Round Two, Media Ownership
Round Two, Media Ownership

The Federal Communications Commission is at it again.  In 2002 and 2003, community radio activists from far and wide filed comments at the FCC, fighting a round of media deregulation that would have cut our voices from the airwaves and given companies like Clear Channel free reign over what we hearrd every day.  Because of your work, we forced the FCC to take back its terrible rules -- and together we won Prometheus vs. the FCC, the lawsuit that sent them back to the drawing board.

On June 21st, the FCC will put forward another set of rules -- and community media rabble rousers will lead the way once again.  As we get ready to tell the FCC how homogenized, corporate media hurts our families, and how community media empowers us to lead in our communities, please read this statement from Prometheus founder Pete Tridish.

And stay tuned -- there's a hot summer ahead for low power FM radio, community media, and the fight for our airwaves in the United States and around the world.

A printable version of the statement below can be found by clicking here .

 

June 21st, 2006

Contact:  Hannah Sassaman, Pete Tridish, 215-727-9620 

A printable version of the statement below can be found by clicking here .

Statement of Prometheus Radio Project on the Resumption of the Media Ownership Proceeding

In June of 2004, Prometheus Radio Project won its lawsuit against the Federal Communications Commission, when the FCC attempted to deregulate corporate media ownership in the United States.


“Prometheus Radio Project is a grassroots organization that helps small neighborhood groups to start radio stations. Many of these people became so frustrated with the ham-fisted powermongering of the media owners that they decided that they needed to build their own media institutions. On the lunch line in grade school, we all learned that everyone should get "firsts" before anyone gets "seconds." And yet these corporations want to gobble up hundreds of channels, while neighborhood groups who want to start radio stations are told there is nothing left for them. We are told we should be satisfied to put up flyers on the street corner, or, at best, take snapshots for a MySpace page.

Prometheus is building a station this summer with the Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste (PCUN) – a group that turned to community radio when they experienced censorship first hand. This farmworker labor union, PCUN, used to buy time for a weekly show on a local AM station for $250 an hour. But when the owner of the strawberry fields learned that PCUN was using its show to organize for workers' rights, he persuaded the radio station to cancel their contract with PCUN. Now, fifteen voiceless years later, PCUN is launching a low power station in Woodburn, Oregon on August 20th.

We sued the FCC over the media ownership rules in 2004 because people we know have experienced first hand the inordinate media influence of powerful economic interests. Our lawsuit proved that Michael Powell's proposed rules were empirically indefensible, and the court ordered the FCC to take a step back and listen to the public before tampering with protections that Americans have long relied upon.. We hope that Chairman Kevin Martin will:

1)Consider all the proposed ownership rule changes as a single interrelated proceeding so their cumulative impact can be considered rationally

2) Allow substantial public input through hearing and comments, and not rush the process.

3) Pledge that for every hour he has spent listening to industry arguments, he will get outside the beltway and listen to ordinary Americans just as much.

Our hundreds of low power stations are mostly volunteer operations where hundreds of local people at each station, pouring their good intentions and their time into doing something good for their communities.  As their representatives, it was terrifying for us to challenge the FCC on rules that the former Chairman wanted so badly: with one stroke of a pen, an angry FCC Chairman can make choices that destroy the hopes and dreams of the people that are making low power radio happen in their communities. In fact, there is a proceeding sitting before the FCC right now where even through mere inaction, the FCC can suffocate the future of LPFM. While those potential stations waited five years or more for the commission to give them access to their own airwaves, they watched their potential frequencies get given away to those who already dominate every market.


Even though it puts the tiny 100 watt slice of the media pie that we have won in jeopardy, low power FMs feel that the fate of the American media is too important to leave it in the hands of a gaggle of corporations. When the rules are reworked this time, let's do it the right way.”