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Views > August 30, 2005

Sand, Sun and Spectrum Policy

By Craig Aaron

After returning from the recess, Congress intends to auction off the public airwaves to the cell phone companies for at least $20 billion.
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Summer is no time to talk about spectrum policy. So instead, let’s pretend this is a column about going to the beach.

Imagine for a moment that you’re relaxing on the white sand, with a slight breeze in the air, just steps from the clear blue water. This beach is open to the public, but it’s never too crowded. It’s a great place to surf.

But then one day you show up, and there’s a huge brick wall blocking your path to the shore. Without telling anyone, the government sold off this seaside spot to a private developer. Seems they were a little short of cash because of too many tax cuts. If you still want to dip your toes in the water, the new management expects you to pay through the nose.

You’d be pretty angry, right?

Well, that’s exactly what’s happening right now in Congress. Only the valuable public resource being auctioned off isn’t the beach—it’s a prime slice of the public airwaves.

A little background: In 1996, Bill Clinton and Congress handed the nation’s television broadcasters billions of dollars worth of the radio spectrum for free to make the transition from analog to digital broadcasting.

Where broadcasters now have one channel on the air, they’ll soon be able to “multicast” four to six channels simultaneously (with no new obligations for public interest programming). This will be especially troubling if the broadcasters succeed in overturning broadcast ownership rules at the FCC. They could potentially control as many as 12 or 18 channels in a single market.

In exchange for this windfall, the broadcasters were supposed to complete the digital transition by the end of next year—and return their old analog spectrum to the government. But they’ve been slow to make the switch, so Congress is preparing to impose a new “hard date” of Dec. 31, 2008, at which point your TV will stop working if you don’t subscribe to cable or satellite.

That’s right. Though nobody has bothered to warn consumers, millions of TVs being sold right now will soon be obsolete. Even though 85 percent of U.S. households subscribe to cable or satellite, Consumers Union estimates that 39 percent of homes have at least one TV relying on over-the-air analog signals. Unless the government pays for a subsidy, tens of millions of viewers will have to cough up at least $50 for a converter or buy new TVs altogether. (Guess which one the electronics industry is counting on.)

But the real scandal of the digital television transition is what’s going to happen to the analog spectrum that’s being vacated by the broadcasters and returned to the government. After returning from the recess, Congress intends to auction off the public airwaves to the cell phone companies for at least $20 billion.

You wouldn’t know from the paltry press coverage of this boondoggle that there’s an alternative. Instead of a one-time fire sale, Congress could open the airwaves to the public and lay the groundwork for universal, broadband access. All they have to do is set aside a portion of the spectrum as “unlicensed,” meaning anyone can use it, not just the highest bidder.

The wireless network at your corner coffee shop uses unlicensed spectrum. But right now Wi-Fi operates in the high-frequency “junk bands,” which are cluttered with signals from microwave ovens, garage-door openers and baby monitors. The airwaves being taken from the broadcasters, however, are the Malibu of the radio spectrum—fine beachfront property.

Signals at these lower frequencies travel farther at lower powers and can go through obstacles like walls, trees and mountains. That means lower infrastructure costs for broadband providers, encouraging the development of local wireless networks and lowering prices. With more unlicensed spectrum, the “Community Internet” networks being set up across the country would be even faster and more reliable. Super-high-speed broadband connections for just $10 a month could be a reality.

Under the current regime, a majority of Americans are unable to get connected or afford the high-priced commercial service offered by the cable and phone companies. The United States has fallen to 16th place worldwide in broadband penetration—behind countries like South Korea, Japan, Canada and Finland. More unlicensed spectrum would help narrow the digital divide.

We’re heading for a world in which all communications—television, telephone, radio and the Web—will be delivered over the Internet. The choice seems clear: We can sell off our public resources to pay for the war, tax cuts or more pork-barrel projects. Or we can invest in the future, bringing the benefits of broadband to all Americans.

But first our lawmakers need to pull their heads out of the sand.

Craig Aaron is the communications director of the national media reform group Free Press and a senior editor of In These Times. The views expressed here are his own.

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  • Reader Comments

    Yes, I believe that wireless Internet access is a public right and should be regulated by local governments just like any current public utility. This is just a perfect example of how the private sector is placing its own short-term financial gain ahead of the long-term and far more pervasive benefits that society receives by having free Internet access. The government does have a role to play in our economy.

    This is a prime example of how the private sector fails to deliver for the American people.

    Posted by Liberal on Aug 30, 2005 at 10:39 AM

    We neither on cable or dish, we get our TV from an analog system.  How can we keep this from going away?  We are retired and on a limited budget.  We have had Dish and also DirectTV, but it was so many channels that we never watched.  We would be happy to pay for our TV if we could choose the channels we wanted.

    Posted by louisecolvin on Aug 30, 2005 at 2:59 PM

    louisecolvin don’t worry. Two reasons: 1) the chances are that the delay will be extended; 2) the solution is an inexpensive device/converter. No big deal (cost of 1-2 months pay tv, which you would buy if you could buy only the channels you watch).

    Change is inevitable. Not a lot of work for buggy whip makers anymore. Leaded gas has come and gone (remember the old “joke"” first you pay to have them put lead in the gas and next you pay to have them take it out again?). TVs and their signals will be digital sooner of later. The delay has already been substantial.

    Posted by wolf on Aug 31, 2005 at 8:26 AM

    Those unchecked repugnants controlling both houses, Congress and Senate, are forever up to something to cut liberties from common folk. If they cut off pensioners TV access with the raise of a hand or an “aye, aye, Commander and Chief” I’m extremely wary of what else they’ve been up to while the world gawks not stop at the (mainly filtered) horrendous reports of their mismanageed efforts in the southern gulf of the US. One paticular ‘sound byte’ made it’s way to air.

    Yesterday, Sept. 8/05, more than a week after Katrina’s wrath pummeled America’s southern gulfcoast, I was elated to hear an onlooker at Cheneyburton’s media op in ravashed Mississippi finally tell him what (ironically) decent Americans have been wanting to voice for years themselves: “FU*k OFF MR. CHENEY!”

    I’m sure he’s heard it before, but he denied it like his typical lying, coniving self, answering the reporters question on it with, “it’s the first time” he heard it. Intolerant of blatant BS, I’m reminded of Harry Morgan’s “Colonel Potter” on good old analog tv’s “Mash” whom said: “Horsehockey!”

    Posted by neilemac on Sep 9, 2005 at 9:23 AM
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