“I think the public interest standard is largely a sham at this point. And the sooner we kind of grasp that, the faster we’ll come up with some solutions … In the first 75 years of the FCC’s existence it granted over 100,000 license renewals. In only four cases was a renewal application denied because the licensee failed to meet its public interest programming obligations…” explains panelist Steven Waldman. Christopher Ali points out that there seems to be a shift from the belief that the public interest standard is about a broadcaster’s responsibility to the public. Previously implemented regulations that were beneficial to the public interest, such as ascertainment and the main studio rule, are no longer in effect.
Shedding light on the historical context, Catherine Sandoval explains, “It took [the FCC] between 1934 to 1949 to award even the first broadcast license to a minority, to a person of color. And they didn’t award the first television license until 1973.” Yosef Getachew furthers that the inequity affects more than just the public interest standard – it impacts communications ecosystems as a whole.
Yosef Getachew explains that one criteria examined during the merger process is whether the merger benefits the public interest, “not only does it not harm the public interest, but does it actually have an improvement?” Getachew found that merger filings don’t often have much information about how they will help the public interest. Christopher Ali highlights a recent FCC decision that states that any transfer of license from one company to another is by definition in the public interest.
What can we do to address these issues with the public interest standard? Although there are many possible improvements, we include here a subset of those addressed in the roundtable conversation:
• Reshape the conversation to prioritize quality local journalism
• Request more data on the demographics of license owners
• Hold companies accountable for the promises they make during the merger/acquisition process
• Reinstate regulations that prioritized the public interest (ascertainment & the main studio rule)