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To: Maigrey
"Mass deregulation of the mass communication is the end of democracy."

i am interested to hear if anyone has serious arguments against this position.

is any amount of media regulation acceptable?

or is it contradictory to suppose that a government regulated press can ever be a 'free' press?

is a profit driven corporate press any more 'free' in its function?

8 posted on 06/03/2003 8:48:53 AM PDT by jethropalerobber
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To: jethropalerobber
>> is any amount of media regulation acceptable?

A little late to this thread but i'll take a shot.

For a country that supposedly has free press, broadcast media has always been highly regulated. Remember the "fairness dictine"? Was the rule for a long time, but it's gone now and it's hard to imagine it ever coming back.

Now, over the past several years, we have whittled at the onerous regulations that have dictated the number and kind of media outlets an entity is allowd to own. Is there really a reason to have such regulations? I don't think so. The only reason they are there is because, in the early years of broadcasting, people seemed to think it was a good idea, yet there could not have been any evidence at the time to support it, because it had never been tried.

The only regulation we need is licensing to allocate spectrum and protect established users, so when a broadcaster is set up to operate on a particular fewquency in a particular locale and a footprint is established for it's coverage area, nobody else can broadcast a signal that interferes with that.

And believe me, that kind of regulation gives the FCC plenty to do. In this area, a regional outfit bought one of the smaller local FM stations and moved it's transmitting antenna from one of the lower foothills to the highest nearby peak in the Coast Range mountains, ostensibly to provide coverage to Florence, a coastal town which, at the time, had no radio stations (this was about 20 years ago). The move was actually calculated to give them a little more than that. They already owned an AM and an FM in the Eugene market, and while the new station ID'd as being in Florence, their programming and advertising were clearly targeted to Eugene. The problem here is that the new location of the transmitter covers a very wide area, and essentially blocks use of an adjacent frequency anywhere else in Western and Central Oregon. The FCC goofed on this one, other broadcasters cried foul, but it was too late as it had been approved.

That case is interesting because it showed how a broadcaster could circumvent the multiple ownership restrictions that existed at the time, and in doing so cause needless waste of spectrum. Had the broadcaster been allowed to then own a second FM station in the Eugene market, they probably would have kept it in the foothills, and an adjacent channel would have been available for another broadcaster who might have wanted to actually locate in Florence or another nearby town.

Clear Channel now owns that station, along with Eugene's most powerful AM station (50 Kilowatt), three or four lesser FM stations that were similarly moved to higher elevations from the small farm towns they originally served, and the 1.6 Megawatt local NBC affiliate.

And I like it. In this area, before they started buying stations and making them more powerful, there were dead spots where you could get no FM radio at all, but if the FCC had been doing it's job with respect to frequency allocation, it could have been done more efficiently.

Dave in Eugene
11 posted on 06/08/2003 12:02:03 PM PDT by Clinging Bitterly (Tagline error. Press ALT-F4 to continue.)
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