Friday marked the public’s last chance to file comments with the Federal Communications Commission’s Future of Media initiative, and people didn’t hold back from telling the agency they want a better media system.
This proceeding represents an ambitious yet critical undertaking by the FCC to examine the news and information needs of communities in light of economic and technological shifts in the media industry. The agency is reviewing media laws that shape everything we see, read and hear, and asked the public to weigh in.
On Friday, Free Press submitted 9,000 petition signatures to the FCC from local citizens calling on the agency to put the public interest first in any new policy decisions the emerge from this proceeding. In addition, nearly 1,000 Free Press members and allies submitted in-depth individual comments to the FCC through our website.
Free Press also joined the New America Foundation, Media Access Project and more than 20 local media justice organizations to submit formal comments to the FCC. Our comments encompass four broad areas for the Commission to consider:
Below is an excerpt from the executive summary:
Information Needs of Communities:
While it is true that most people now have access to more information than at any previous time in human history, it also unfortunately remains the case that race, gender, income, education, geography, age, disability, and sexual orientation all continue to unjustly shape Americans’ opportunities. Many communities, both of identity and geography, have never been well-served by existing media outlets and infrastructure.
Communities of color and native and rural areas have often been excluded from access to robust infrastructure and emerging technologies, and the issues affecting them have too often been unexplored by professional journalists. New technologies are creating opportunities to address that, but technological change alone will not create equitable representation or access.
We determined that despite the proliferation of new technologies that have the potential to enhance access to information, by and large the information needs are not being met. In particular, the unevenly distributed nature of the "digital revolution" and the lack of local information equality have a negative impact on both health and economic well being of communities.
Trends and Challenges in the Provision of News and Information:
The digital revolution has upset old business models – particularly those of the advertising-reliant variety. As a consequence, there exists a looming – though not certain – market failure in the production and circulation of publicly relevant news, especially at the local level. Traditional media are scrambling to maintain balance in the new environment, but have been slow to adapt. However, while there is much cause for concern about the ability of the new media environment to meet the needs of a democratic society, there are also innovations currently underway in newsrooms.
While many are in their infancy, they hold the promise for enhancing both production of information as well as engaging communities and individuals in creative new media endeavors. Additionally, new journalistic and civic engagement ecosystems are sprouting up in local news markets across the country, but these systems are emerging in a halting and uneven fashion. As has been widely noted, many of the newest digital media outlets do little or no original reporting. What’s worse, practices of “digital redlining” and the consequences of the migration of legacy news organizations to suburban markets have the potential to replicate patterns of clustered “information paucity” that existed in the pre-digital era.
FCC policies can enhance the availability and diversity of information:
The FCC has a legitimate interest and important role to play in promoting a vibrant Fourth Estate. Historically, the FCC has sought to foster not only a substantial quantity of, but also quality of information, as well as access to information by promoting competition, diversity and localism.
We suggest a number of FCC actions, many on existing proceedings that would preserve or enhance the production and availability of news and information. Moreover, none of these policy recommendations involve any foray by the FCC into content regulation. In particular, we recommend that the FCC:
The Government's Role in Development of a Healthy Media Ecosystem:
FCC policies alone cannot save journalism. In some cases, important potential solutions will fall outside the FCC’s regulatory ambit. Thus, we also discuss broader policy shifts that could support a healthy information ecosystem, including:
Download the full comments and leave your feedback in the comments section.
Free Press is a national, nonpartisan organization working to reform the media. Free Press does not support or oppose any candidate for public office. Through education, organizing and advocacy, we promote diverse and independent media ownership, strong public media and universal access to communications.
Free Press is a national, nonpartisan, nonprofit organization working to reform the media. Through education, organizing and advocacy, we promote diverse and independent media ownership, strong public media, quality journalism, and universal access to communications.
The Free Press Action Fund is member-supported. We don't take money from government, political parties or businesses. Member contributions fuel our work lobbying Congress and the FCC, filing lawsuits and legal complaints, and aggressively advocating for real changes in media policymaking that benefit the public.
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