MICHIGAN

MI: Public Access Advocates Hoping to Hold on to Cable Channel

Posted on February 1, 2008 - 11:36am.

from: Flint journal

Public Access Advocates Hoping to Hold on to Cable Channel

January 30, 2008
By Joe Lawlor

He’s a slouching, white-haired government critic who shouts out of your television set and shakes his hands to make a point.

But Bob Leonard, the former Genesee County prosecutor, no longer appears on Comcast Channel 17.

( categories: AT&T | Comcast | MICHIGAN | State Franchises )

MI: AT$T Knocked for 'Inferior' PEG Channels

Posted on February 1, 2008 - 8:11am.

from: MultiChannel News

AT&T Knocked for 'Inferior' PEG Channels
Alliance for Community Media Complains About U-verse TV to House Subcommittee
by Todd Spangler
Multichannel News
1/31/2008 5:24:00 PM

The Internet-based technology AT&T touts as giving it an edge over the cable industry was criticized this week by the Alliance for Community Media as providing an “inferior” platform for public, educational and government channels.

( categories: AT&T | Comcast | MICHIGAN | State Franchises )

MI: Are you laughing with your cable provider?

Posted on February 1, 2008 - 8:09am.

from: Media Mouse

Are you laughing with your cable provider?

About a year ago, Comcast ran an ad called the "Laugh Riot" which had the look of a Seattle style WTO protest, featuring cops in riot gear, people throwing things at the cops, and even street puppets. Unlike real confrontations between cops and street protesters where people get beat up and arrested, this commercial invited viewers to get Comcast cable and enjoy all the wonderful comedy programs they offered.

( categories: Comcast | MICHIGAN | State Franchises )

MI: Comcast apologizes in channel dispute

Posted on January 30, 2008 - 10:55am.

from: Detroit Free Press

Comcast apologizes in channel dispute
Agreement sought on public-access switch

January 30, 2008

By JUSTIN HYDE

FREE PRESS WASHINGTON STAFF

WASHINGTON -- A top Comcast executive apologized Tuesday to officials in Dearborn and other communities for pushing plans to move public-access cable channels, which would make them less available to up to 450,000 customers.

( categories: AT&T | Comcast | MICHIGAN | State Franchises )

MI: Statement by Dingell at PEG Hearing

Posted on January 30, 2008 - 10:42am.

from: House Committee on Energy and Commerce

Statement by Dingell at PEG Hearing

January 29, 2008

Mr. Chairman, thank you for holding this very important hearing. Let me begin by welcoming several friends here today, including my dear friend Mayor O’Reilly of Dearborn, Michigan. Thank you for your time and efforts to participate in today’s hearing.

( categories: AT&T | Comcast | MICHIGAN | State Franchises )

MI: Comcast Defends Michigan PEG-Channel Move

Posted on January 30, 2008 - 8:49am.

from: Broadcasting and Cable

Comcast Defends Michigan PEG-Channel Move
Executive VP David Cohen Testifies Before House Energy & Commerce Committee
By John Eggerton -- Broadcasting & Cable, 1/29/2008 8:56:00 AM

Comcast was on Capitol Hill Tuesday defending its transition of some Michigan PEG (public, educational and government) channels to digital delivery but apologizing for the way it was handled.

( categories: AT&T | Comcast | MICHIGAN | State Franchises )

MI: Dingell Praises Comcast For PEG Flexibility

Posted on January 30, 2008 - 8:47am.

from: MultiChannel News

Dingell Praises Comcast For PEG Flexibility
Comcast Official Cites 'Friendly' Talks With Michigan Local Officials

By Ted Hearn -- Multichannel News, 1/29/2008 2:51:00 PM

House Energy and Commerce Committee chairman John Dingell (D-Mich.) Tuesday afternoon saluted Comcast Corp. for its willingness to reach a compromise with local governments in Michigan on the carriage of public, educational, governmental channels. Comcast, for its part, affirmed it was not discriminating against PEG channels.

( categories: AT&T | Comcast | MICHIGAN | State Franchises )

ACM Testimony at Congressional Hearing

Posted on January 30, 2008 - 7:48am.

from: Alliance for Community Media

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE January 29, 2008
Alliance Testifies Before House Subcommittee on
Telecommunications and the Internet: PEG Access in the Digital Age

The Alliance was represented today by Ms. Annie Folger, Executive Director of the Midpeninsula Media Center. Ms. Folger’s remarks addressed the difficulties faced byPublic, Educational and Government Access (PEG) communities across the country. Many communities are seeing threats to their PEG facilities posed by video providersunwilling to meet the public interest needs required of them in exchange for use of the public rights of ways.

Millions of dollars have been spent by telephone and cable companies in the past two years on ad campaigns and lobbying to influence state cable franchise laws in 17+ states. The FCC has over-ruled Congress, assigning itself powers that Congress conferred on local communities.

According to Ms. Folger, “This chaos is being used to dismantle PEG support and to damage channel quality and accessibility. We welcome competition. But it cannot be used to gut PEG Access provisions that have provided direct service to the local community.”

Ms. Folger’s testimony made special example of AT&T’s blockage of closed-captioning for PEG channels on its U-Verse system— a function which is found on all of its commercial channels. At DeAnza Community College in Ms. Folger’s home town, this policy results in the inability of hearing impaired students to view classes which they need to improve their lives.

According to Alliance Executive Director, Anthony Riddle, “AT&T’s practice is not the only bad act
by a video provider, but their willingness to sacrifice the needs of disabled students in a race for
profit certainly makes them the poster child of corporate irresponsibility.”

Another issue raised was the “channel-slamming” engaged in by Comcast. Channel slamming is the practice of relocating PEG channels from desirable locations to inaccessible or unfamiliar “wilderness” locations on short notice and without consulting the communities involved. Additional purchases or steps may be required of viewers to continue viewing PEG channels. This practice isolates the PEG channels and tends to decrease viewership.

Many PEG centers have moved into digital technology for production and transmission. PEG centers are fully engaged in migration to an integrated digital environment when allowed. The primary challenge for PEG access is not digital technology, but how cable providers— whether traditional cable operator or telephone company— provide PEG signal quality, functionality, channel placement and funding support.

For more detail, please refer to the attached testimonies and summaries.

ACM: Annie Folger Summary: summary-testimony.doc

( categories: AT&T | Comcast | MICHIGAN | State Franchises )

MI: Public access TV channel may vanish without funding

Posted on January 29, 2008 - 9:41pm.

from: MLive

Public access TV channel may vanish without funding
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
By Greg Chandler
The Grand Rapids Press

HOLLAND -- Viewers of the public-access channel MacTV outside the Holland city limits could lose coverage later this year unless their local governments step in to assist with funding.

( categories: Comcast | MICHIGAN | State Franchises )

MI: Comcast apologizes for local access changes

Posted on January 29, 2008 - 8:19pm.

from: MLive

Comcast apologizes for local access changes
by The Associated Press
Tuesday January 29, 2008, 4:46 PM

WASHINGTON -- Comcast Corp. apologized today for the way it handled a proposed shift of community access programming in Michigan that would force customers to get converter boxes or new TVs to continue to watch local government meetings and high school football games.

( categories: Comcast | MICHIGAN | State Franchises )
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