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From Associated Press, June 29, 2007
Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) members on Thursday listened to Maine
residents’ views on how broadcasters are fulfilling their
public-service responsibilities at a time when most local media have
come under out-of-state ownership. It was the fifth of six
public hearings on FCC proposals that would affect media ownership,
including one that would loosen long-standing restrictions on how many
local media outlets a single company can own. Several hundred people
attended, and 150 of them signed up to make two-minute statements.
Many
were television and radio employees who trumpeted their community
service despite a lack of local ownership. Others were members of
organizations that campaign for stricter regulation of media ownership
and public access to the airwaves.
Four of the five
commissioners attended the hearing. The fifth, FCC Chairman Kevin
Martin, was in Washington, where his newborn baby is hospitalized.
Media
ownership in southern Maine has changed dramatically. Since 1998, all
three network affiliate television stations and the Portland Press
Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram were bought by out-of-state companies.
Chellie
Pingree, president of Common Cause, a nonprofit, nonpartisan citizen’s
lobbying group, lamented a decline in local news coverage by radio
stations as many came under national ownership. Most local stations now
air no local public-affairs broadcasting, and those that do offer a
minimal amount, she said.
But Suzanne Goucher, president of the
Maine Association of Broadcasters, defended the commitment of the
state’s radio and TV stations to serve communities. In a statement, she
said broadcasters’ recognition of their responsibilities was displayed
by extensive coverage of recent storms.
Thursday’s hearing had
its roots in a 2003 effort led by former FCC Commissioner Michael
Powell to deregulate media ownership further. The goal included
allowing companies to own more stations — including multiple stations
in the same market — and allowing cross-ownership of television and
newspapers, now barred in most circumstances.
Congress and the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected the proposals.
Commissioners
now say they are starting the process again and, while relaxing
ownership rules is still on the table, so is the introduction of
broadcasting standards that spell out the kind of public service they
are expected to provide.
Seattle Times Publisher Frank Blethen
has been an outspoken supporter of limits on media ownership. The
Seattle Times Co. owns the Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram
and several smaller newspapers in Maine.
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