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Will
Senate Loosen Definition of 'Educational' Channels?
(July 3, 2000)
By Stephanie Lash for Current.
Public
broadcasters are ramping up efforts to secure support of their
position in the Senate after the House of Representatives overwhelmingly
approved legislation that could force the FCC to permit religious
broadcasters to use reserved noncommercial educational channels
without determining whether they carry educational programs or
not.
The
Noncommercial Broadcasting Freedom of Expression Act, H.R. 4201,
passed the House 264-159 on June 20, with six Republicans and
153 Democrats opposed. The legislation, sponsored by Rep. Charles
W. "Chip" Pickering (R-Miss.) but largely rewritten
by House telecom subcommittee Chair Billy Tauzin (R-La.), gives
nonprofit organizations the right to hold noncommercial educational
(NCE) radio or television licenses if the station broadcasts material
the organization itself deems to serve an "educational, instructional,
cultural or religious purpose." The bill notes that religious
programming "contributes to serving the educational and cultural
needs of the public," and dictates that the FCC treat it
the same way it treats educational programming.
Before
the legislation's passage, the House rejected an alternative offered
by Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.) that would have mandated the reserved
channels be primarily educational. The amendment, which Markey
had also offered in the House telecom subcommittee, failed again,
this time by a margin of 174-250.
The
Coalition to Defend Educational Broadcasting, organized by the
Citizens for Independent Public Broadcasting, argues that the
bill obliterates the requirement that broadcasting on these reserved
noncommercial educational (NCE) channels must serve the public
interest. Concerned that passage of the legislation will open
the gateways for religious groups to dominate these licenses and
"bring an end to educational programming as we know it,"
groups like the Alliance for Community Media, People for the American
Way, Americans United for the Separation of Church and State,
Interfaith Alliance, National PTA and the Department of Professional
Employees of the AFL-CIO have joined together to lobby against
the bill. They are meeting with senators and hoping to curb any
further action on the legislation or a similar bill, S. 2215,
authored by Sen. Tim Hutchinson (R-Ark.) which would keep reserved
channels open for any purpose allowed for nonprofits under the
tax laws.
Religious
broadcasters wouldn't be new to the reserved band. They already
hold 245 NCE radio licenses and 23 NCE television licenses. Much
of their programming is syndicated by satellite, and a good portion
of that current programming doesn't meet the FCC's minimal educational
program requirements, says Jerold Starr, executive director of
Citizens for Independent Public Broadcasting. Because the FCC
only investigates such matters when there is sufficient community
outcry, and because citizens have rarely challenged such programmers,
the religious broadcasting on these channels has gone by unnoticed.
The
legislation was spawned by an FCC ruling in December approving
the transfer of WQED's second Pittsburgh frequency a reserved
NCE channel to religious broadcaster Cornerstone TeleVision.
The commission attempted to establish guidelines requiring that
more than half of broadcasting on NCE licensed channels be used
for "an educational, instructional or cultural purpose,"
and excluding "religious exhortation" from that category.
"In
Pittsburgh we had a movement and forced the FCC to look at the
type of programming Cornerstone would produce," Starr says.
"They were forced to conclude it didn't measure up."
But, under pressure from allies of religious broadcasters, the
FCC soon vacated its new guidelines.
Washington
attorney John Crigler, of Garvey, Schubert and Barer, explains
that the FCC requires that applicants for NCE channels show why
they are eligible for the licenses, which (when available) can
be acquired at much less expense than commercial licenses. Television
station applicants are asked to show that they would use the channel
primarily for the advancement of an educational purpose, while
radio applicants are simply asked to show that their station would
be used for the advancement of an educational purpose (note the
absence of the word "primarily"). Crigler says that
licensees are asked to give this information to the commission
in applications for new stations, for license transfers or for
license renewals. At renewal time, applicants are subject to challenges
but they rarely materialize, Crigler says.
It's
difficult to predict what will happen with the House bill as the
Senate hurries to finish before the summer break and the election
campaigns of the fall. And even if the legislation were to become
law, it is unclear how current pubcasters would be affected.
Whatever
the outcome, it wouldn't be immediate. The FCC has instituted
a freeze on allotting licenses to new television and radio channels.
But when that is over, religious broadcasters can be expected
to apply for more NCE licenses, Crigler said.
Jeneba
Jalloh, of the Georgetown Law Center Institute for Public Representation,
said the legislation is primarily going to affect how the FCC
goes about determining NCE licenses in the future.
"It
would allow people, who before wouldn't qualify, to get these
NCE licenses really cheap," Jalloh said.
And
once those licenses are assigned, challenging them may prove even
more difficult. The commission will assume, rather than force
the organization to prove, that it is qualified to have such a
license, Crigler explained.
"It
will make it even more difficult to even raise the issue of whether
a religious organization is eligible," he said. "The
commission is not going to look into that issue."
Starr
also worries that such licenses could go to nonprofit affiliates
of organizations already broadcasting on commercial bands. The
allure of such inexpensive licenses may prompt some religious
groups to devise such arrangements and even share programming
with stations on reserved channels.
David
Brugger, president of America's Public Television Stations (APTS),
said he wants to keep stations responsible for airing educational
programming in the reserved spectrum. He worried that the real
long-term danger of the legislation would be money-crunched stations
who realize they can make "an easy $20 million" by selling
their licenses to other nonprofits, such as religious broadcasters,
which tend to have greater capital reserves for buying stations
than pubcasters do.
"Who
knows what hard times a licensee may come upon," Brugger
said, "and there's no safeguards left in place."