House Republicans invoke bin Laden to expedite DTV transition

By Scott M. Fulton, III | Published January 28, 2009, 11:02 AM

Rep. Joe Barton (R - Texas)"Osama bin Laden isn't fictional, and he isn't waiting," stated Rep. Joe Barton (R - Texas), in a vehement defense of the February 17 hard date.

The postponement of the US' digital TV transition to June 12 hit its first serious legislative obstacle yesterday, when Republicans led by the former Energy and Commerce Committee chairman and current ranking member, Joe Barton, debated the DTV Delay bill for the first time on Capitol Hill. Yesterday, Barton and colleague Rep. Cliff Stearns (R - Fla.) began their counter-assault with a letter (PDF available here) to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D - Calif.), urging her to reconsider even bringing the delay bill to the floor for a vote.

"Turning to the merits of the bill -- there are none," Barton and Stearns wrote.

"Our public safety sector has been pleading since 1996 for access to the broadcast spectrum that would be freed up by the DTV transition, and which they need desperately for emergencies like 9/11. Instead, they've become like the fictional refugees who got as far as Casablanca in the '40s, only to 'wait, and wait, and wait,"' the representatives continued. "Osama bin Laden isn't fictional, and he isn't waiting. That should be reason enough to go full speed ahead with the DTV transition. Instead we're suspending the rules in order to wait, and wait, and wait?"

The rule's suspension to which the Reps. referred concerns a move by Barton's most recent successor at Commerce, Rep. Henry Waxman (D - Calif.), the bill's current sponsor. Rep. Waxman apparently worked with Speaker Pelosi to suspend the usual rules in which the bill would have debated in committee during a markup session this week. That suspension fast-tracked the bill, so it could be debated on the House floor without alteration.

By bypassing the rules, apparently backers of the bill are also allowing themselves to consider an additional $650 million in funding by way of the current economic stimulus package being debated in both houses of Congress. This stimulus incentive would apparently include printing of even more coupons -- something which would clearly have met with opposition from Ranking Member Barton.

With regard to the waiting lists that recent applicants for converter box coupons have been subjected to, Reps. Stearns and Barton argue that extending the conversion date to June 12 would simply enable the list to persist longer. Barton is introducing a counter-measure to the House floor (whose text has not yet been made public), which he says will focus on the actual problem: expediting the coupon redemption process which may affect an estimated five percent of the US population.

Meanwhile, public safety officials would be prevented from making use of the vacated analog TV spectrum for first response communications -- which is what led to the Reps.' reference to terrorists.

While the current bill would not prevent private broadcasters from going ahead with the transition in the meantime if they so choose, public broadcasters that receive government funding, and other smaller private stations, will most likely wait until the last possible day. That may actually lead to a dangerous situation for some stations that have not invested in repairs to their aging analog transmitter equipment, under the belief that they may not be necessary after February.

This morning, NPR station WBUR Boston reported on a Spanish-language Univision affiliate there whose analog transmitter equipment is on the brink of disintegration. If it doesn't make the switch right away, a repair to the analog signal could cost the same amount as a station employee's entire annual salary. Meanwhile, Boston PBS TV affiliate WGBH, the NPR station reports, estimates that station could spend well into the six-figure range if it's forced to extend its analog signal by way of setting some kind of example. That station has already cut a dozen workers, and may have to let more go, it says, if the bill passes.

That sentiment was echoed this morning by Rep. Greg Walden (R - Ore.), who is quoted by TV Week as saying that stations in his home state could spend as much as $1 million each in expenses to extend their analog signals past February. Again, the current bill allows stations to go ahead and make their switches before June if they wish, but that may be over the warnings of legislators who would prefer everything take place in tandem in order to avoid confusing the public.

"Further delaying the DTV transition deadline will confuse consumers without clearing the waiting list," wrote Reps. Stearns and Barton, "jeopardize public safety and wireless broadband spectrum, cost broadcasters and industry a fortune in additional preparations, and engender further spending of at least $650 million in the stimulus package to pick up the pieces."

Further debate on the bill will continue in the House today, where it is expected to come to a vote before the end of today's docket.

Comments

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Well, I'm worried. What happens if folks switch on their television in February and they can't get any channels? They might do something reckless, like leave their homes, and talk to other people. They might read, possibly even books. God help us if they discover a library. Because as we all know, reading can lead to thinking. And we can't have any of that.

Evil(tm) Evolutionist

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Most likely Obama is seeking to delay the transition because he is being bribed by a couple of contributors to his campaign--Clearwater and AT&T. Several blogs and articles have suggested that, including this one:

http://arstechnica.com/t...-possible-dtv-delay.ars

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Hey, whatever works to get rid of analog TV as soon as possible.

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They were telling people about this change 3 years ago. A ten year old kid could save the 50 bucks for a conversion box in that time. More than half a billion wasted imo. This is the government we get.

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i think that most people are using their t.v.'s via digital signal at this time.

unfortunately, there are many procrastinators who will likely get up off the couch when they find themselves unable to waste time and mind and feed their fat faces with junk food in front of a blank tv screen.

also, just because one spanish station is having a heart attack about repairs to their analog transmitters, doesn't mean that other spanish stations for that area, are having the same issues.

besides, the fcc should have ethical common sense as to not penalize the station for not maintaining their analog signal after february.

therefore, pushing dtv transition back is not necessary. it is simply a waste of time and more money.

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Why don't they just post the coupon online so anyone can print it out? Wal-Mart could print up a ton of them and have em' sitting on the counter in electronics. You'd still need a valid proof of purchase so the likelihood of fraud would be relatively low.

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That would make sense, but this is the government we are talking r about. It would be great, due to the fact that the system (online or phone) does not accept many addresses as official addresses, and many can't even get on the waiting list and will never get a coupon.

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it's not the cost of the coupons lol...it's the cost of the box/discount the coupon represents...the original DTV transition budget is completely out of funds, hence the waiting list.

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They are not out of funds ... technically. Over 40% of the coupons have expired without being redeemed. The program was poorly set up (probably intensionally.) If they can know that the coupons reached that status, they very well could have set up a system in which the appropriated funds form every expired coupon would have been recycled back into the funds immediately. They just don't care. Who really benefits form the whole digital broadcast mandate anyway. It surly is not the consumer (by the way, the government now refers to us as consumers rather than citizens.)

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So...let's see. Considering all of the time and labor in both sides expended in trying to figure out when to do what has been planned for over 10 years, how much money has been wasted in this debate?

Yup..."change"... LOL!

Hint to Congress: Just STFU and DO IT!

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The bill wasn't killed, it just won't be fast-tracked. No, Bin Laden isn't fictional, neither is the NSA, who really could use these frequencies to spy on Americans. Imagine all those harmless red-light cameras and other cameras monitoring by CCTV. Now, take away the CCTV an use the freed-up analog spectrum for a network, that most Americans, even those of the nerd class, won't be monitoring to see what is up, as they will be busy playing with ATSC 8VSB etc. This is only one of the applications the transition could be used for. I worked as an EMT in a county that still uses analog. They just went to narrow band ( as requied by the FCC.) They do not, and will never need more of the analog spectrum in many places.

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Bill was killed in the House.

No delay. It goes forward as planned.

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Now we know why Bin Laden started 9/11. It was to slow the DTV transtion. WOW!!!! What a evil mastermind Bin Laden is.

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I know what you mean -- Bin Laden had it planned. People have been saying "remember when 9/11 happened?" Now, they might be saying " remember when 2/17 didn't happen -- what tragic day?"

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Ironically, the 9/11 attacks slowed down the digital transition in NYC, as they knocked out the digital transmitters on the mast of the WTC.

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Haha...

Stupid people obviously exist on both sides of the "aisle".

Ban the special interests.

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There are NO PLANS AT ALL to use any of the freed spectrum for public safety. Nobody bid on the spectrum for the public/private partnership, and the company that was planning to do it went bankrupt. Stop spreading this stupid myth.

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AMEN....Preach on Brother!

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