SPOTLIGHT
FCC:
READY, SET, CONSOLIDATE
The
new rules are awful, but the fight is far from over
By
Neil Hickey
"The big guys will
get bigger and the little guys will have to decide whether they
want to exist anymore. That thumbnail synopsis from a Wall
Street analyst at the Sanford C. Bernstein firm says a great deal
about how the FCCs revised rules on media ownership, handed
down on June 2, may affect the way Americans get their news.
The battle over the rule changes raged for eighteen months, with
media companies lobbying fiercely for relaxation, or even elimination,
of ownership regulations. Consumer advocates waged a spirited
but unsuccessful defense. The oddest of bedfellows joined forces
to fight the proposed changes. On the right: the National Rifle
Association, Family Research Council, Parents Television Council;
on the left: Common Cause, Consumers Union, NOW. (A dark
day for democracy, said Common Causes president.)
Legislators, from Mississippis Trent Lott to North Carolinas
Ernest Hollings, demanded that the rules be left in place. More
than 750,000 messages from angry citizens and groups clogged the
FCCs mailroom and e-mail servers.
But FCC Chairman Michael Powells mind was made up. He and
his two Republican colleagues on the commission amid bitter
dissents from the two Democratic members greased the skids
for the national TV networks to buy up more television stations
than they already own, for media companies to own both newspapers
and TV stations in the same market, and (among other changes)
for one entity to own as many as three TV stations in the same
area. Broadcasters see a triumph of the First Amendment in the
FCCs action, as the government loosens its regulatory chains.
The groups representing consumers consider it a body blow to the
three defining public interest goals: diversity of views, competition,
and healthy local news and commentary.
Federal limits on broadcasters power in the U.S. have an
honorable history, starting in the 1930s when dictatorships in
Europe strangled dissent by monopolizing access to the public.
The U.S. Supreme Court repeatedly has ruled that the publics
First Amendment rights trump those of media corporations, and
that placing reasonable limits on Big Medias capacity to
conglomerate is justified to defend citizens rights.
The FCCs June 2 action is part of a larger picture: a natural
extension of the present administrations policies on taxation,
the budget, and the environment, which have supported the interests
of the business community. Reed Hundt, a former FCC chairman,
told Salon that the vote was less about principles of diversity,
competition, and localism than an effort to strengthen a powerful
alliance between the political right and Big Media.
Big Media worked hard for its victory. According to a report issued
in late May by the Washington-based watchdog group The Center
for Public Integrity, media companies spent $2.8 million over
the last eight years transporting FCC commissioners and their
staffs, free of charge, to meetings in places like Paris, Honolulu,
Las Vegas, Rio de Janeiro, and London. Chairman Powell was the
leading beneficiary of the industrys largesse: forty-four
trips costing $84,921. The survey also noted that in the months
leading up to June 2, FCC commissioners and their aides held seventy-one
off-the-record meetings with broadcast executives, and only five
with consumer advocates.
Broadcast and cable TV coverage of the crucial debate on media
ownership in the months just before June 2 was disgracefully meager,
when it wasnt brazenly pro-administration. (The NewsHour
with Jim Lehrer and Bill Moyerss Now were among the exceptions.)
The debate about media ownership, in fact, is not over
now that the waters have been roiled and the public is beginning
to understand the stakes. In late June, a bipartisan group of
Senate Commerce Committee members, in a rebuke to the FCC, approved
legislation that would roll back much of the commissions
deregulatory action of June 2. [Update: By a vote of 400
to 21, the House of Representatives passed legislation on July
23th to block the commission's deregulatory action.] Challenges
also will be brought in the Washington, D.C., Circuit Court of
Appeals. The issue will be campaign fodder for the 2004 elections.
By law, the FCC is obliged to review the regulations every two
years, and therefore this entire process will be reprised in 2005,
perhaps with even more dramatic results. For now, many Big Media
execs swear they wont rush out and hungrily swallow up media
properties to boost their power and their revenues. (Were
going to take little bites, said a Tribune Company vice
president.) But that misses the point. What we risk over the long
haul is ownership creep that may eventually see the end of the
few remaining rules, and with them, the publics right to
the widest possible array of news and opinion at which
point, robust, independent, antagonistic, many-voiced journalism
may be only a memory.