Showing posts with label FCC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FCC. Show all posts

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Politics As Usual For Senator Not-So-Clean

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 5, 2008
2:39 PM

CONTACT: Institute for Public Accuracy (IPA)
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167

With McCain Visiting the White House, New Spotlight on Lobbying Scandal

"At no time have I ever done anything that would betray the public trust nor make a decision which in any way would not be in the public interest and would favor anyone or any organization."
-- Sen. John McCain, Feb. 21, 2008



JEROLD STARR
Starr just wrote the Nation magazine piece "The Other Side of the McCain Lobbyist Scandal," which states: "I don't know whether Senator John McCain had sex with lobbyist Vickie Iseman, but I do know, first hand, that he broke the rules while doing the bidding of media mogul Lowell 'Bud' Paxson [for whom Iseman was working], a major contributor to McCain's 2000 presidential campaign. McCain's staff lied about it then and they are inventing new lies even now. ...

"Now McCain's camp has issued a 1,500-page document of 'facts' the recent New York Times exposé did not include, such as that 'No representative of Paxson or Arcade and Fay asked McCain to send a letter to the FCC regarding this proceeding.' However, within days, Paxson himself advised the Washington Post that both Iseman and he had met with McCain about the matter.

"At the time, according to well-documented reports, Paxson's family, company and law firm were contributing tens of thousands of dollars to McCain's campaign while McCain flew around on Paxson's private jet to rallies and to fundraisers on Paxson's yacht."

Starr was co-chair of the Save Pittsburgh Public Television Campaign and wrote the book Air Wars: The Fight to Reclaim Public Broadcasting, about the battle for a public TV station in Pittsburgh that Paxson was seeking. Starr is now visiting professor of communication at the University of California at San Diego.


LINDA WAMBAUGH

ABCNews.com's piece "Public Broadcasting Activists Refute McCain Campaign 'Facts' on FCC Letters" reports: "After the story broke, the McCain campaign distributed a lengthy document stating that the senator's commerce committee staff 'met with public broadcasting activists from the Pittsburgh area' who opposed a controversial license swap involving Iseman's client, Paxson Communications, before it sent two letters to the Federal Communication Commission urging the commissioners to vote on the issue. ...

"Starr's co-chair on the campaign, Linda Wambaugh, said that she and Starr handled all the lobbying for [the] campaign. 'We were it. Anything would have come through us,' said Wambaugh. 'There was absolutely no contact whatsoever -- no meetings, no phone calls, no correspondence.'"


ANGELA CAMPBELL
Currently director of the Institute for Public Representation at Georgetown University Law Center, Campbell was the attorney for the Save Pittsburgh Public Television Campaign.

She said today: "Some are claiming that McCain just asked the FCC to act, so he really wasn't doing Paxson a favor. But Paxson needed the FCC to act by a certain date. The chair of the FCC was not inclined to take up the matter. McCain's letters were clearly to Paxson's favor."


(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. I.U. has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is I.U endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)


The Nazis, Fascists and Communists were political parties before they became enemies of liberty and mass murderers.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Kerry: Don't Hog The Airwaves


Amen!

Sen. Kerry: Open the Airwaves for a Better Internet

Sen. John Kerry joined the broad public movement for a better wireless Internet today when he urged the Federal Communications Commission to ensure that our airwaves be used to make the Internet “more competitive, affordable and widespread.”

Sen. Kerry: Don’t Let Them Hoard the Airwaves

Last week, the FCC was flooded with more than a quarter-million letters from people who urged the agency to use soon-to-be-available public airwaves to connect more Americans to an open, neutral and accessible Internet.

In a June 12 letter delivered to FCC Chairman Kevin Martin, Kerry wrote: “Competition [in America] has been insufficient to drive the innovation that brings faster speeds, next generation applications and a richer, diverse and multifaceted Internet.”

Our Chance to Catch the World

In the letter, Senator Kerry cited recent reports showing the United States has fallen behind much of the world in broadband penetration.

“Nearly 60% of the country does not subscribe to broadband service — in large measure because it is either unavailable or unaffordable,” Kerry wrote. “The 700 MHz auction could put this country one step closer to achieving ubiquitous Internet access throughout America.”

Cheaper and Faster: An ad in Spain touting 20 megabits per second at 6 Euros ($8.02) a month

The failure of broadband services in the United States is due to a marketplace failure — where phone and cable companies provide access to more than 96% of residential high-speed Internet users.

“For years, we have heard that a third technology would emerge to compete head-to-head with DSL and cable modem,” Kerry wrote. “It has not yet materialized, and today Americans pay as much as 10 times more than broadband consumers in Asia and Europe. Worse still, competition has been insufficient to drive the innovation that brings faster speeds, next generation application and a richer, diverse and multifaceted Internet.”

An Open and Neutral Alternative

As the FCC considers rules to govern the upcoming 700 MHz spectrum auction,
SavetheInternet.com members have called upon the agency to set aside at least half of the available spectrum for open and nondiscriminatory Internet access.

This will guarantee new wireless innovators have the opportunity to enter the market in head-to-head competition with the big phone and cable companies.

Used correctly, these public airwaves could beam high-speed Internet signals to every park bench, schoolroom, workplace and home in America. Incumbent phone and cable companies like AT&T, Verizon and Comcast want to lock in their market dominance by hoarding spectrum and stifling cheaper alternatives to their networks.

The FCC: Choosing Between Telcos and the Public Interest

The FCC can either decide to open these airwaves to new competitors and innovation or let them be squandered by the same companies that now monopolize access.

The agency must create conditions that will foster a cheaper, more widespread alternative, Kerry wrote to Martin. “We cannot allow this spectrum to be hoarded by large companies who don’t intend to use it, which stifles innovation and the growth of competitive networks.”
“Dramatically expanding wireless broadband may not be the silver bullet that solves all of our broadband challenges,” he added. “But it will certainly be a big step in the right direction.”


(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. I.U. has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is I.U endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)


The Nazis, Fascists and Communists were political parties before they became enemies of liberty and mass murderers.