FCC chairman to resign Friday, CNBC confirms

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
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http://msnbc.msn.com/ID/6852019/
NEW YORK - Federal Communications Commission Chairman Michael Powell will step down from his post Friday, CNBC confirmed.

Early Friday, The Wall Street Journal reported The FCC top man ? son of outgoing Secretary of State Colin Powell ? would resign. The editorial cited no reason, nor did it name a source for the information.

An FCC spokesman was not immediately available to comment.

Powell, a Republican was named chairman in 2001 by President Bush, after serving as a commissioner since 1997.

Some of the issues that have come to the forefront during his tenure include the concentration of media ownership among a smaller number of companies and regulations that govern telecommunications competition.
Kind of torn on this. Powell was a great advocate for moving DTV along, even threatening slow moving broadcasters with a loss of their license.

On the other side, we have the bullsh*t morality fines being levied over piss-ant crap.
 

Darkhawk28

Diamond Member
Dec 22, 2000
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Originally posted by: conjur
http://msnbc.msn.com/ID/6852019/
NEW YORK - Federal Communications Commission Chairman Michael Powell will step down from his post Friday, CNBC confirmed.

Early Friday, The Wall Street Journal reported The FCC top man ? son of outgoing Secretary of State Colin Powell ? would resign. The editorial cited no reason, nor did it name a source for the information.

An FCC spokesman was not immediately available to comment.

Powell, a Republican was named chairman in 2001 by President Bush, after serving as a commissioner since 1997.

Some of the issues that have come to the forefront during his tenure include the concentration of media ownership among a smaller number of companies and regulations that govern telecommunications competition.
Kind of torn on this. Powell was a great advocate for moving DTV along, even threatening slow moving broadcasters with a loss of their license.

On the other side, we have the bullsh*t morality fines being levied over piss-ant crap.


Howard Stern must be laughing is mf'ing arse off!
 

catnap1972

Platinum Member
Aug 10, 2000
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Originally posted by: Darkhawk28
Jerry Falwell will probably be the new FCC chair...

It'll probably be some fundie whack job...wouldn't be surprised if PTC gets a say in it.
 

CaptnKirk

Lifer
Jul 25, 2002
10,053
0
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Originally posted by: conjur
Originally posted by: CaptnKirk
How about Ashcroft as the replacement ?
Isn't he ill? And by ill I mean physically. ;)

He's not so ill as to not be able to find a way to tell everyone how they should live to his standards.

 

halik

Lifer
Oct 10, 2000
25,696
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yeah i'm sorta in between. I hate the FCC for acting on the whims of one fundie group (98+% come from this one religious organization). On the other hand i loved the idea of mandating HDTV broadcast. Not that it actually makes much diff, as all the free networks are on HighDef (at least for me)
 

catnap1972

Platinum Member
Aug 10, 2000
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Originally posted by: halik
yeah i'm sorta in between. I hate the FCC for acting on the whims of one fundie group (98+% come from this one religious organization). On the other hand i loved the idea of mandating HDTV broadcast. Not that it actually makes much diff, as all the free networks are on HighDef (at least for me)

Looks like were going to get the best (worst?) of both worlds:

"Fallwell in HDTV"...all day every day!
 

Darkhawk28

Diamond Member
Dec 22, 2000
6,759
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Originally posted by: catnap1972
Originally posted by: halik
yeah i'm sorta in between. I hate the FCC for acting on the whims of one fundie group (98+% come from this one religious organization). On the other hand i loved the idea of mandating HDTV broadcast. Not that it actually makes much diff, as all the free networks are on HighDef (at least for me)

Looks like were going to get the best (worst?) of both worlds:

"Fallwell in HDTV"...all day every day!

Hallelujah!!!
 

BDawg

Lifer
Oct 31, 2000
11,631
2
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Originally posted by: halik
yeah i'm sorta in between. I hate the FCC for acting on the whims of one fundie group (98+% come from this one religious organization). On the other hand i loved the idea of mandating HDTV broadcast. Not that it actually makes much diff, as all the free networks are on HighDef (at least for me)

I don't think they're religious...just teetotalers.
 

Pliablemoose

Lifer
Oct 11, 1999
25,195
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Yep, if it's (the replacement) some idiot that doesn't even know what a TIVO is, it'll screw with my karma:(
 

raildogg

Lifer
Aug 24, 2004
12,892
572
126
the FCC chairman needs to be tough, determined and willing to act. we need to keep some level of decency on tv, especially public tv
 

catnap1972

Platinum Member
Aug 10, 2000
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From everyone's favorite fundie crackpot censorship website (PTC):

http://www.parentstv.org/ptc/n.../indecency_latimes.htm

The Parents Television Council in the News

Jube Shiver, FCC Chairman Plans to Leave Post Early, The LA Times, January 21, 2005.

WASHINGTON -- Michael K. Powell, the controversial head of the Federal Communications Commission who championed speedier Internet connections, tougher enforcement of broadcast indecency rules and greater consumer protection from telemarketers, announced today that he is leaving the agency in March.

Powell, a 41-year-old former Army officer and antitrust lawyer who was appointed chairman in 2001 by President Bush, sent a letter to Bush today indicating his intentions to leave.

Powell, who struggled during his tenure as chairman to loosen government restrictions on media and telephone companies, did not elaborate on his plans.

"Having completed a bold and aggressive agenda, it is time for me to pursue other opportunities and let someone else take the reins of the agency," Powell said in the statement.

"During my tenure, we worked to get the law right in order to stimulate innovative technology that puts more power in the hands of the American people, giving them greater choices that enrich their lives. Evidence of our success can be seen increasingly in the offices, the automobiles and the living rooms of the American consumer."

Washington has been whispering about Powell leaving the FCC since February 2003, when the soft-spoken but strong-willed official suffered an embarrassing defeat over telephone competition rules.

Last March he lost a 3-2 FCC vote on his bid to change telephone competition. Three months later, the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia blocked the FCC from implementing media ownership rules that would have allowed a company or individual to own TV stations reaching 45% of the national audience, up from 35%.

The new rules also would permit ownership of a newspaper and TV or radio station in a market and as many as three TV stations in big cities.

"He's been the most deregulatory-minded chairman we've seen in recent memory," said Scott Cleland, chief executive of Washington researcher Precursor, which follows communications and media policy. "It's unlikely whoever will replace him will be anywhere near as deregulatory."

The FCC chairman has received praise from many executives for freeing the communications industry from government red tape. However, consumer groups have criticized Powell for attempting to allow media giants to grow bigger and for moving too slowly to crack down on indecency on the airwaves.

"Michael Powell will not be missed by those of us concerned about creating a more democratic media system," said Robert W. McChesney, founder and president of the nonpartisan media reform group Free Press, in Northampton, Mass.

"His tenure was marked by some of the lowest moments in the history of the FCC ? most notably the disastrous decision in June 2003 to further loosen media ownership rules."

Powell, the son of Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, who is also leaving his post, overcame objections from some direct marketers and phone carriers, and implemented two measures that became popular with consumers: a national "do-not call" registry with which consumers could sign up to avoid calls from telemarketers, and a rule letting cell phone subscribers keep their mobile phone numbers when switching carriers.

He also gained attention over the past year for trying to crack down on indecent radio and television broadcasts after singer Justin Timberlake bared Janet Jackson's breast during the Super Bowl halftime show that aired on the CBS television network last February.

At the time, Powell called the incident a "classless, crass and deplorable stunt" and ordered an investigation. The FCC fined CBS $550,000 for the incident in September. The network is fighting the penalty.

But some groups fighting indecency on the airwaves, among them the Parents Television Council in Alexandria, Va., say the FCC has been too timid and too slow in its crackdown and have urged Congress to increase penalties against broadcasters.

Bush has the power to designate an interim FCC chairman from the current commissioners.

If he does so, he would likely choose one of the agency's other two Republicans: Kathleen Abernathy, 48, a former telephone industry lobbyist, or Kevin Martin, 38, a longtime Washington lawyer who worked as an advisor during Bush's 2000 campaign.

Bush could also quickly move to nominate a new chairman, which would require Senate confirmation.

At the top of most observers' list is Becky Armendariz Klein, the first Latina to chair the Texas Public Utility Commission.

Klein, who served in the Medical Service Corps during Desert Storm, ran against Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas) in Austin for Texas' 25h congressional seat at the urging of White House officials and Republican Party leaders but lost.

Other candidates include Bill Bailey, senior legal counsel for the Senate Commerce and Science Committee, FCC chief of staff Bryan Tramont and Janice Obushowski, telecom consultant and ambassador to the World Radio Communications Conference, who headed NTIA under the first President Bush.


Most analysts do not expect a dramatic change in policy at the FCC even if the White House taps Martin, who sometimes clashed with the chairman over telephone deregulation.

However, a Powell departure could leave the FCC without a full complement of commissioners for months and create a political opening for FCC Commissioner Michael Copps, a Democrat who has proved to be a determined and outspoken critic of media consolidation in the broadcast industry.

Lobbyists also worry that any vacuum at the FCC could lead to regulatory gridlock at a time when the telecommunications industry is in the midst of wrenching economic and technological change. Other experts say the industry will face a major policy change in any event.

The FCC chairman has received praise from most companies for his deregulatory approach. However, consumer groups have criticized him for attempting to allow media conglomerates to grow bigger and reducing competition among wireless providers.

Powell had planned on following his father's military career, entering the U.S. Army and becoming a first lieutenant. But a jeep accident in Germany in 1987 almost killed him, requiring 18 units of blood during extensive surgery in which doctors almost left him for dead.

After a long rehabilitation, he went to law school, clerked for a federal judge, became chief of staff at the Justice Department's antitrust division, and was appointed in 1997 as an FCC commissioner by President Bill Clinton.
 

catnap1972

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Aug 10, 2000
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Originally posted by: raildogg
the FCC chairman needs to be tough, determined and willing to act. we need to keep some level of decency on tv, especially public tv

TV's have this magic thing called an ON/OFF switch

Learn how to use it!

 

raildogg

Lifer
Aug 24, 2004
12,892
572
126
Originally posted by: catnap1972
Originally posted by: raildogg
the FCC chairman needs to be tough, determined and willing to act. we need to keep some level of decency on tv, especially public tv

TV's have this magic thing called an ON/OFF switch

Learn how to use it!

no, public tv should be decent enough for you to watch with your family. Im not speaking of HBO or Cinemax, I understand that.