Senators seek media ownership rule ban

Date : 03/05/2008 @ 3:41PM
Source : TFN
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Senators seek media ownership rule ban

        WASHINGTON (AP) - A bipartisan group of senators on Wednesday introduced a
resolution to stop regulators from easing media-ownership rules in the nation's
20 largest cities.
    They fear the Federal Communication Communications rule would leave
newspaper readers, radio listeners and TV viewers with fewer choices. Several
consumer groups are challenging the rule in federal court.
    The "resolution of disapproval" was introduced by Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D.,
-- along with 13 Democratic and Republican co-sponsors -- to stop the Federal
Communications Commission from implementing the new rule that the agency
approved in December. The FCC published the cross-ownership rule in the Federal
Register on Feb. 21.
    "When nearly half of the people in this country are told that in their
cities and towns the media will get the green light to consolidate, they will
not be happy," said Dorgan in a release. "The proposal would also create a
greatly relaxed approval process for newspapers to buy TV stations in any U.S.
media market and spur a new wave of media consolidation in both large and small
media markets."
    Dorgan said the FCC "ignored the thousands of comments at public hearings"
opposed to further consolidation.
    An FCC spokeswoman declined to comment on the resolution.
    Justin Kitsch, a spokesman for Dorgan, said the Senate has 60 legislative
days to vote on the resolution.
    The agency's new rule overturns a 32-year-old ban intended to keep major
media companies from monopolizing newspapers and broadcasters in their market.
    Marvin Ammori, general counsel with Free Press, said his public interest
group and others are challenging the rule in federal court. He said the rule
won't take effect until they get a decision, which could take several months.
    Advocacy groups fear the cross-ownership loosening will spread beyond the
top 20 markets, where companies, such as the Tribune Co., Media General Inc. and
Gannett Co. Inc., would buy up competitors in smaller cities.
    FCC Chairman Kevin Martin, who voted for the measure along with his two
Republican colleagues, pressed for a vote on the measure despite opposition from
some Capitol Hill lawmakers to delay it.
    The agency's two Democrats say the rule will trigger more consolidation.
Martin contends that in the top 20 media markets, the FCC would have a high
threshold for approving co-ownership.
    Kitsch said Dorgan and former Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss., passed a resolution
to overturn a similar FCC rule in 2003 that would have permitted more media
consolidation. A year later, the FCC decision was rejected by a rejected by a
federal appeals court and the rules were sent back to the FCC for review.
    (This version CORRECTS date FCC order was published.)
    
Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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