Seattle Times – RECYCLING a bad idea does not improve it. The Federal Communications Commission has announced it will try again to undermine independent local journalism by weakening media-ownership rules.
That is not how the FCC describes loosening restrictions on cross-ownership of television stations and newspapers in the same market, but the public, Congress and the courts see it exactly so.
The commission’s notice of intent last week tried to put a happy face on media consolidation that erodes news gathering and further denies access to ownership by minorities and women.
“With the perils of consolidation on clear display in market after market, it would seem to me that we should be closing loopholes, instead of providing them,” Commissioner Michael J. Copps said in a statement.
Sadly, Copps is leaving the commission at the end of the year. He has been an outspoken defender of enforcing newspaper-broadcast rules in the public’s interest.
Broad opposition to loosening media-ownership rules has been consistent and intense. The last time the FCC tried to expand demonstrably failed policies, a federal judge pushed back. The commission had tried to act without full public participation.
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