State Franchises
Posted on November 17, 2007 - 11:07am.
from: KOMU
More Funding For CAT-3
COLUMBIA - Columbia Public Access Television (CAT-3) operates on a very small budget. However, a rise in cable franchise fee rates will give CAT-3 a boost.
Although Cable Access Television does not turn a high profit, those who work on it say it is still work all the time.
Posted on November 14, 2007 - 7:22am.
from: OakRidger
AT&T still wants statewide franchises
By: John Huotari | John.huotari@oakridger.com
AT&T is still pursuing legislation that would allow a statewide franchise for video services that could compete with cable television.
If approved, the legislation would keep the giant phone and communications company from having to negotiate individual franchise rights with more than 300 local governments, AT&T officials said.
Posted on November 13, 2007 - 7:57am.
from: Daily Cardinal
Cable bill must provide protection
By: The Daily Cardinal Editorial Board /The Daily Cardinal
Cable compeition bill will only be ready for passage once customers are guaranteed protection
According to Chad Vader—a local, if fictional, benefactor of public access television—Wisconsin’s Cable Competition Bill (AB 207) crushes provisions for the sustained existence of public access funding and consumer protections.
Posted on November 13, 2007 - 7:55am.
from: Badger Herald
Mayor dislikes cable proposal
by Cara Harshman
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Mayor Dave Cieslewicz released a statement Friday expressing his concerns with the newly passed video franchise bill — a bill that would transfer the power to grant video franchises from local municipalities to state government.
Posted on November 12, 2007 - 10:05pm.
from: Fighting Bob
PoisonBill.com
By Cynthia Laitman
Except for the heroic minority who voted “no” (Sens. Risser, Carpenter, Erpenbach, Jauch, Kreitlow, Lassa, Miller, Robson and Vinehout), the state Senate reached a new low in its disregard for the public interest by rushing to approve the corporate-backed cable bill. Promoted by AT&T and its industry allies, this bill guarantees decreased competition and higher prices for consumers -- the opposite of what its backers have so disingenuously claimed.
Posted on November 12, 2007 - 10:04pm.
from: Waxing America
November 12, 2007
Reflections on the AT&T Cable Bill and the Wisconsin Sell Out
The comments from the supporters of the AT&T cable legislation that passed the Wisconsin Senate make it obvious they never intended to honestly discuss the issue.
All they say is that the bill will bring competition to Wisconsin.
Posted on November 11, 2007 - 6:09pm.
from: Jackson Sun
AT&T seeks state bill
Legislation would create franchising agreement
By NED B. HUNTER
nhunter@jacksonsun.com
Proponents of a state bill that would create a single franchising agreement with AT&T and all local communities will attempt to get the legislation passed when the General Assembly reconvenes in January.
Posted on November 10, 2007 - 10:59am.
To Community Access Television Supporters:
Last night, Thursday, November 8, was very disappointing. AB207 passed 23 to 9 in the Wisconsin Senate. The bill must go back to the Assembly for minor adjustments to make both versions match, but additional changes are not likely to be made by the Republican-controlled Assembly. The AT&T lobbyists were positively giddy toward the end of the evening. Their bill had passed with barely a change, barely a nod to the concerns of Wisconsin residents.
Posted on November 10, 2007 - 10:59am.
Community Access Television Supporters:
Last night, Thursday, November 8, was very disappointing. AB207 passed 23 to 9 in the Wisconsin Senate. The bill must go back to the Assembly for minor adjustments to make both versions match, but additional changes are not likely to be made by the Republican-controlled Assembly. The AT&T lobbyists were positively giddy toward the end of the evening. Their bill had passed with barely a change, barely a nod to the concerns of Wisconsin residents.
Posted on November 10, 2007 - 10:54am.
from: Wisconsin Democracy Campaign
Cable Bill Supporters Got 12 Times More Than Foes
Madison - State senators who voted for a controversial bill to change the way cable television providers are regulated in Wisconsin accepted $1.2 million in campaign contributions from special interests that support the proposal compared to less than $100,000 to senators who voted against it, a Wisconsin Democracy Campaign analysis shows.
The proposal, Assembly Bill 207, was approved 23-9 Thursday by the state Senate. The bill was chiefly backed by telephone giant AT&T which wants to break into the cable TV market more easily than present state cable franchising rules would allow. The proposal is also backed by business, manufacturing, broadcast and telephone interests.
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