TVNewsCheck
Los Angeles
Times, February 17, 2016 6:36 AM EST
But
KSDY-TV Channel 50 and many other small, low-power TV stations, which often
broadcast foreign-language and religious programming, soon could be silenced —
knocked off the air involuntarily by the federal government with no
compensation to their owners or alternatives for their often low-income
viewers.
The
stations are the potential collateral damage of an ambitious attempt, set to
begin next month, to transform the public airwaves for the mobile needs of the
21st century.
The
Federal Communications Commission plans to use a complex auction to shift a
huge swath of public airwaves from carrying TV signals to delivering wireless
services to smartphones and other data-hungry mobile devices.
Because of
that effort, the Aghas could face the prospect of spending millions of dollars
more to keep their station on the air by moving to another channel — if one is
even available after broadcasters are squeezed into a smaller chunk of the
radio-wave spectrum.
If there
is no free channel available, KSDY would go dark.
"They
awarded these licenses and asked people to invest and now they say they can
just take this and auction it and keep the money," said Maxwell Agha,
chief executive of International Communications Network Inc., which owns the
station. "It's a totally unfair process."
The
two-part auction, which begins March 29, aims to attract some of the nation's
1,782 full-power broadcasters and 405 specially licensed Class-A low-power
stations to give up their rights to those airwaves in exchange for a cut of the
proceeds paid by wireless providers for licenses to use them.
The
auction could produce as much as $40 billion in new licensing fees from
AT&T Inc., Verizon Communications Inc. and other wireless providers.
Proceeds of even half that could lead to a jackpot of hundreds of millions of
dollars to some TV station owners who decide to give up their airwaves.
But the
auction could be a disaster for many of the smallest players in the broadcast
world and their viewers: the 1,822 standard low-power TV stations.
"It's
catastrophic," said Ravi Kapur, who owns a Chicago low-power station and
founded a network that airs South Asian programming on low-power stations in
Los Angeles and Houston. "These stations will go off the air and there
will be a whole lot of calls to the FCC and members of Congress and it will be
too late."
The FCC
created low-power TV licenses in 1982 "to provide opportunities for
locally oriented television service." The stations are limited in their
signal power, allowing them to broadcast on unused patches of the airwaves as
long as they don't cause interference with full-power stations.
Because
they are easier to obtain and less costly to run, low-power TV stations have a
much more diverse ownership.
About 15%
of the stations were owned by women, 10% by Latinos and 1.3% by blacks, as of
2013, the most recent FCC data available. That compares with 6.3% of full-power
stations owned by women, 3% by Latinos and 0.6% by blacks.
It's catastrophic. These stations
will go off the air and there will be a whole lot of calls to the FCC and
members of Congress and it will be too late.
The FCC is
obliterating the most successful program they've ever implemented to diversify
media ownership," said Kapur, who runs Diya TV, which is billed as
"America's first 24/7 South Asian broadcast television network."
The
auction rules highlight that low-power stations are second-class citizens in
the broadcast world.
Unlike
full-power station owners, low-power broadcasters won't get any of the auction
proceeds. Low-power TV station owners also are ineligible for the $1.75 billion
in federal money set aside to help broadcasters who want to stay on the air pay
for the new equipment needed to move to another channel.
In
addition, the auction could cause thousands of other viewers to lose not just
low-power signals but all over-the-air TV.
Residents
of rural areas, valleys and other locations that are difficult for broadcasts
to reach are at risk because hundreds of signal-boosting transmitters, often
owned by local governments, also could be pushed off the condensed broadcast
airwaves.
"There
are places where that's going to be devastating," said Michael Couzens, a
communications attorney who does work for San Bernardino County.
The county
has five special taxing districts that own and operate TV towers with
translator stations that extend Los Angeles broadcast signals. "Many of
the places we serve do not have cable because they're too sparsely populated to
lay the cable to," Couzens said.
FCC
Chairman Tom Wheeler has called low-power TV "an important voice in the
community," and the agency has taken steps to help stations, including
translators, stay on the air.
Those
measures include permitting stations to share channels, using special software
to squeeze as many channels into the remaining spectrum as possible and
allowing stations to stay on auctioned airwaves until the buyer is within 120
days of using them.
There's a
finite amount of public spectrum, so condensing it means channels for fewer
stations, particularly in urban areas such as Southern California. Adding to
the complications are the FCC's plans to set aside some additional broadcast
spectrum for use by Wi-Fi-enabled devices.
Low-power
broadcasters are not allowed to cause interference with full-power TV signals,
further limiting their options.
The
auction will cost the low-power TV industry about $1 billion in additional
spending and lost investment, said Mike Gravino, director of the LPTV Spectrum
Rights Coalition, which advocates for the industry.
Some
low-power broadcasters have gone to court to challenge the auction rules. And
the potential problems of low-power TV have raised concerns in Congress.
"The
owners of these stations do provide a service," said Rep. Joe Barton (R-Texas),
who asked the Government Accountability Office to study the auction's effect on
them. "They are licensed. They have invested their own money."
Barton
said Congress might need to pass legislation to help low-power stations if the
auction produces major problems.
At KSDY in
San Diego, the Aghas are worried about the sliver of the airwaves they use to
air programs such as "It's Your San Diego" and "The Go Navy
Show" on Channel 50, as well as Latino and religious shows on three
digital sub-channels.
"The
government wants to take it and raise a lot of money and we're not going to get
a dime of it," Maxwell Agha said.
He and his
wife are particularly frustrated because their station already has spent
millions of dollars to move its channel, which is further complicated because
it has to avoid interference with U.S. and Mexican broadcasters.
KSDY
started out on Channel 61, but the FCC forced all broadcasters to move below
Channel 52 as part of the transition to digital TV that began in the late 1990s.
The Aghas said they conducted expensive engineering studies and were awaiting
approval to move to Channel 38, but the Mexican government grabbed that
channel.
They
applied to become a Class-A station, which would have given them a greater
chance of finding a new channel and federal compensation to make the move. But
the FCC denied the application in 2014.
"We
are a minority-owned business and community-based," said Michelle Diaz
Agha, chief operating officer of International Communications Network. "All
we want at the end of the day is to be the voice that we've been working for
and investing in."
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