Guest guest Posted February 10, 2003 Report Share Posted February 10, 2003 http://news./news?tmpl=story2 & cid=91 & ncid=91 & e=2 & u=/bpihw/20030206/en_b\ pihw/copps__silenced_by_fear Copps: Silenced by fear Thu Feb 6, 1:05 AM ETAdd Entertainment - Hollywood Reporter to My By Craig Linder and Brooks Boliek WASHINGTON (The Hollywood Reporter) --- An FCC (news - web sites) investigation into media industry consolidation has been hampered because key sources fear they will lose their jobs if they come forward, commissioner Michael Copps said Wednesday. In a speech at New York's Fordham University, the Democratic member of the FCC said that some consolidation opponents believe they will be fired, disciplined or demoted if they speak out against the looser ownership caps that many large media conglomerates are seeking. " There are media professionals with strong feelings about the downsides of consolidation for the American people who are afraid to speak for fear of retribution, " he said. " We need to find a way for them to be heard. " The FCC is reviewing several ownership regulations, including caps on the number of television or radio stations a company can own in a single city, rules that prevent a firm from owning a newspaper and television station in the same city and nationwide limits preventing a single company from owning television stations that reach more than 35% of the national audience. Alex Johns, a legal adviser to Copps, said commission employees are working to find a way to allow fearful employees to confidentially air their views on media consolidation while ensuring that those views have the same weight as standard public comments. " They're scared of being blackballed, " she said of the potential witnesses. " There is a genuine concern out there. " Johns said no fearful witnesses had approached Copps directly but that his staff had heard reports that employer retribution was preventing people from testifying. Copps also said Wednesday that the FCC would hold two hearings next month on media consolidation at Duke University in Durham, N.C., and the University of Washington in Seattle. The FCC has come under fire for not venturing beyond the Washington Beltway in seeking opinions on media consolidation. In response, FCC chairman Michael Powell announced plans to hold a hearing in Richmond, Va. -- about 90 minutes from the nation's capital -- on Feb. 27. In a statement released late Wednesday, Powell said that 13,000 people filed comments with the FCC as part of its review of broadcast ownership rules. He scoffed at the idea that witnesses were being intimidated from participating in the hearing process. " It is gratifying to witness firsthand the unparalleled opportunities technology now provides the American public to participate in the democratic process, " Powell said. Powell, a Republican appointee, also rejected Copps' call for more hearings outside the Beltway. " In the digital age, you don't need a 19th century whistle-stop tour to hear from America, " he said. Although Powell confirmed that he would attend the Richmond hearing, he did not address either of Copps' planned forums, saying only, " I commend others for their interest in attending additional forums. " And there was some confusion over just how " official " the Copps-organized hearings could be. Powell said the law invested the power to call official hearings in the chairman. " The only thing official about it is that Mike (Copps) and probably his staff and others are going to have a hearing, " Powell told The Hollywood Reporter when asked about the announcement. " In my opinion there is nothing official about it to the extent that the commission has decided (to conduct hearings). In fact, I had no knowledge that they had planned that until I saw the announcement, " Powell said. " To the extent of what constitutes an official hearing, I think we should be clear, that that's an announcement from a single office of its desire to hold a hearing, which I think is fine, but to say the entire institution is sponsoring that, I think that's pretty grossly inaccurate. " Powell said that Copps was within his power to conduct a hearing. " I think they were trying to draw a distinction between the academic-sponsored ones and ones in which he's going to build them around, " Powell said. " It's an attempt to distinguish between the two. " Powell said the only official field hearing the FCC plans is one in Richmond, Va. scheduled for later this month. Craig Linder is a reporter for States News Service. More entertainment industry news at The Hollywood Reporter Online Gettingwell- / Vitamins, Herbs, Aminos, etc. To , e-mail to: Gettingwell- Or, go to our group site: Gettingwell Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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