Re: No!
fred flintstone said:
Instead of lifting licenses, auction off licenses to the highest bidder.The marketplace rules.Also get rid of all those non-commercial licenses.
I don't know where you've been over the past decade, but the FCC has been auctioning licenses since the abomination known as the Telecommunications Act of 1996 was railroaded through a Republican-controlled Congress and signed into law by a Democratic president as part of the usual political horse trading that goes on in Washington. In fact, the FCC is just now granting construction permits for new stations to the winning bidders in the most recent FM auction.Sorry, but I agree wholeheartedly with Bill Jacobs. The FCC has become far too much of a pawn of big business. Small businessmen are frozen out of commercial broadcasting these days due to the concentration of stations in the hands of a handful of companies, the high stick values of stations caused by the big boys trying to get even bigger, and the current policy of auctioning off frequencies to the highest bidder, rather than granting them to whomever would best serve the community. Sorry, but there is no public interest in using the American public's airwaves to air threats, spew filth, or foster criminal activity.Let's go back a couple of years. Infinity Broadcasting (now CBS) was cited
repeatedly for broadcasting indecent material, both on the
Howard Stern Show and on Opie and Anthony's program. The Communications Act of 1934 (which created the FCC) and subsequent court decisions expressly prohibit the broadcasting of such material. Yet Infinity/CBS not only retains all of its licenses...it has
rehired Opie and Anthony to do a syndicated show originating from WFNY-FM in New York! In 1986, the FCC ruled that RKO General was unfit to be a broadcast licensee due to some alleged shady business practices by RKO's parent company, General Tire & Rubber. The license of RKO's WNAC-TV in Boston was revoked, channel 7 in Boston was granted to a competing applicant, and the remaining RKO General stations were sold at a distress sale. Most of these stations, including WOR in New York, had exemplary programming policies! Yet CBS/Infinity, which has
repeatedly flouted the law by turning the public airwaves into a sewer on some of its FM stations, pays a fine and gets a pat on the butt to not do it again!That said, the FCC needs to do some housecleaning in the noncommercial part of the band as well. In many areas, community stations are being frozen out by the McReligion broadcasters such as the American Family Association, Family Stations, and Calvary Chapel. The FCC recently granted the American Family Association a construction permit for a Class A station on 91.5 in Shenandoah, PA (Schuylkill County). The FCC waived the main studio rules, calling this proposed station a "satellite" of the American Family Association's main station
in Tupelo, Mississippi! Shenandoah does not have meaningful local radio service and it is located near the Susquehanna River, which often floods. How can a station run by a fundamentalist group in Mississippi serve Central Pennsylvania? The multitudes of "satellators" (satellite-fed translators) need to be cleaned off the FM band as well, as these have precluded many local community groups from putting LPFM stations on the air. Which would better serve a local community...an LPFM station operated by a local church or community organization, providing locally-oriented programming of whatever format...or a translator rebroadcasting some religious huckster over 1,000 miles away who smiles sweetly while conning lonely old ladies out of their life savings?The legitimate noncommercial stations provide a valuable service in offering programming that the commercial stations won't touch. Here in Northeastern PA, our local public station, WVIA-FM, provides us with classical music and jazz. We can also get fine programming from the WRTI "network" out of Temple University. While many commercial stations give us morning "updates" replete with Hollywood gossip, WVIA and other public stations give us real news and long form news coverage. WHYY-FM can go into the depth that KYW cannot. And Bill's station, WRDV, provides Philadelphia and the Philly 'burbs with great big band music and pre-Beatles oldies that are available nowhere on the commercial side of the radio dial (except for a few hours on Sunday nights on WOGL).Holding noncommercial stations to the same criteria that commercial stations use in selecting programming would narrow our choices even more than they are now. I guess you are satisfied with hearing nothing but Spanish and urban formats in New York, urban and AC in Philly, or AC and "alternapop" in NEPA.