http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/05/05/concerns-raised-makeup-divers
ity-committee-fcc/

There is a growing voice of concern over the ideological makeup of a
diversity committee at the Federal Communications Commission -- which
critics charge is made up mostly of liberal activists.

A diversity committee at the Federal Communications Commission is
raising the hackles of conservative watchdogs who say its ideological
makeup is hardly diverse. 

The FCC recently renewed the charter of its 31-member Advisory Committee
on Diversity for Communications in the Digital Age, which is set to
convene in Washington Thursday.

The committee's mission is to help "enhance the ability of minorities
and women to participate in telecommunications and related industries,"
according to the FCC. In past years the committee has suggested remedies
like changing the tax code to help minorities purchase radio and
television stations.

But conservatives say the committee is one-sided and made up primarily
of liberal activists who have something more than diversity in mind.

"The idea that we should have a diversity of ownership implies that we
would have a diversity of people on the committee," said radio host
Roger Hedgecock, founder of the Free Radio Coalition.

"The committee is a totally one-dimensional group of activists," said
Hedgecock, who worries that the role of the committee will expand under
President Obama, particularly when the president's appointments are
confirmed and Democrats gain deeper control of the five-member
commission that heads the agency.

Leaders from groups like the National Urban League, the Asian American
Justice Center and One World Economy sit on the committee, which lacks
representatives from groups with a conservative political bent.

But longtime members of the committee say it is simply composed of
people who have expressed an interest in expanding the role of
minorities in the media -- including some of the nation's largest
corporations.

Representatives from telecom companies like Verizon, AT&T Mobile, Virgin
Mobile and Qwest, and television companies like ABC and Showtime have
been appointed in this term to the group, which was established in 2003
when Republicans controlled the FCC.

"The membership is not substantially different than the membership that
was composed under the Republican FCC," said member Andrew Schwartzman,
who is president and CEO of the Media Access Project.

"This committee operated without any controversy under Republican FCC
and I don't expect it to operate under any controversy under Democratic
FCC," said Schwartzman, who noted that there was no political litmus
test for anyone to be appointed a member.

But conservatives worry that with the backing of a Democratic president
and FCC, the committee will be able to mandate more minority ownership
and involvement in the media.

"Why is it the government's job to do a bean count on who owns what? I
would think the only color that matters in business is green," said
Seton Motley, director of communications for the Media Research Center.

Motley and others see a back-door campaign to revive the so-called
Fairness Doctrine, which mandated equal time for opposing viewpoints
during radio and television broadcasts, and whose demise in 1987 led to
the explosion of conservative radio networks and programming.

"The left has reached the conclusion that the political price to pay for
reinstating the Fairness Doctrine is too high, so now they're looking at
these new means," Motley told FOXNews.com.

It's a charge that has been picked up widely on conservative blogs --
which have warned that it would effectively censor conservative radio --
and one that has bewildered members of the committee.

"I don't know anybody on the committee who does support the Fairness
Doctrine," said David Honig, executive director of the Minority Media
Telecommunications Council.

The current chairman of the committee, Henry Rivera, has been singled
out for his past support of the measure when he was a commissioner of
the FCC from 1981-1985. The doctrine died in 1987, only after Rivera
left the FCC.

But Rivera, who declined to comment, has been a member of the diversity
committee since its inception in 2003 and was appointed its chairman by
Republicans in 2006. It is unclear whether he maintains support for the
doctrine or would support moves to revive it.

Committee members said they would never interfere with or even address
the content of broadcasts -- and that worries about a new Fairness
Doctrine were a "paranoid delusion" on the part of some critics.

"Paranoid delusion. I don't have a better explanation," said
Schwartzman.

The FCC's acting chairman, Michael Copps, stressed the importance of
confronting what he called the "sad truth ... that the diversity of this
great nation is not reflected in the ownership of its media and
telecommunications facilities" in an April statement as he announced the
new committee.

But members themselves do not expect much to come out of Thursday's
meeting, the diversity committee's first under a Democratic
administration.
***********************************
* POST TO MEDIANEWS@ETSKYWARN.NET *
***********************************

Medianews mailing list
Medianews@etskywarn.net
http://lists.etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews

Reply via email to