For
Release:
Tuesday, 12 August 2003, 10AM |
Contact:
Ed Mierzwinski or Jen Mueller
U.S. PIRG
(202) 546-9707
|
Groups Call Cable Deregulation A Failure For Consumers: New Report Provides
Blueprint For Reform
Washington, D.C. -- Increased
industry concentration and anti-competitive practices by cable providers since
cable industry deregulation in 1996 have prevented competitors from gaining
enough market share to give consumers real choices, lower cable rates or improve
cable service quality, according to a new report released by the U.S. Public
Interest Research Group.
The report compares industry
and deregulation proponent promises in 1996 to cable consumer realities in 2003:
cable rates have skyrocketed; service levels have declined; industry consolidation
has increased enormously; cable continues to deny competitors access to critical
programming; wireline competition is virtually non-existent; and the industry
now dominates the broadband Internet market, giving it enormous and unregulated
influence over America's digital future.
"Since deregulation
seven years ago, the cable industry has price-gouged consumers by raising its
prices more than 50 percent," said Ed Mierzwinski, U.S. PIRG consumer program
director, "Congress promised that deregulation would bring competition
and lower prices. Instead, the industry has raised prices and used anti-competitive
practices to prevent consumers in nearly every market from having a choice of
cable providers, a choice that would lower their rates and improve their terrible
service."
The study, The Failure
of Cable Deregulation: A Blueprint For Creating a Competitive, Pro-Consumer
Cable Television Marketplace, was endorsed today by Consumer Federation
of America, Center For Digital Democracy, Media Access Project and Consumers
Union.
"The solution to cable's
unfettered abuse is for Congress to move decision making out of Washington,
return authority to local communities, and give consumers real choices. In Washington,
the FCC has simply lost touch with reality," said Mark Cooper, Research
Director of Consumer Federation of America, and the author of the 2002 book
Cable Mergers and Monopolies.
Among the key recommendations
of the report were the following:
· Congress must empower
state public utility commissions (PUC) to regulate all cable rates and charges
for video services until meaningful competition emerges and also return largely-diminished
authority to local communities and their franchising authorities to protect
consumers from the industry's worst abuses.
· Introduce an à
la carte programming requirement to expand consumer choices. Consumers should
be able to choose their own suite of programming, rather than being force-fed
the programming tiers that cable operators want them to purchase.
· Ensure access to
vital programming by preventing the cable companies from their anti-competitive
practices of locking up must-have programming, such as sports and other regional
channels. Modify the existing federal program-access law to eliminate loopholes
that have allowed the cable industry to continue these anti-competitive practices
and undermine the emergence of would-be wireline competitors.
· Empower viewers
by putting a citizen board member on every large (greater than four percent
of cable households) cable company's board and by requiring as a condition of
franchise renewal that cable operators include billing inserts that invite consumers
to join a local Cable Action Group that would operate a local Audience Channel,
well-funded and equipped by the cable company.
The report also documented
that the deregulated cable industry's growing dominance over the emerging broadband
Internet poses real threats to diversity and democracy on the Internet. Unlike
DSL broadband, which is owned by regulated phone companies required to share
their networks, cable Internet service providers can lock out their competition.
As cable companies dominate the user interface they could limit consumer access
to Internet content from online competitors, from streaming video to movie channels.
"If Congress and the
American public pay attention to this report, it may be early enough to forestall
the cable monopoly from hijacking the Internet," added Andrew Jay Schwartzman,
President of the Media Access Project. "The Internet as we know it is in
jeopardy. If the cable television model is extended to the Internet, the open
and interactive system which characterizes the dial up Internet will be lost.
Those who read this report will see how important it is not to let that happen."
"Cable's powerful stranglehold
threatens consumers, competitors and communities. With the impending new FCC
give-away on cable ownership policy, the public must take immediate action to
restrain this media monopoly. Both the future of TV and the broadband Internet
are at stake," said Jeff Chester, executive director of the Center for
Digital Democracy. "Cable's threat to democracy and diversity on the Internet,
our virtual town square, cannot be overstated."
The groups called on Congress
to turn the report's recommendations into actions to protect cable consumers.
"The American public
has little idea how the cable industry has flouted the intent of Congress, co-opted
the FCC, and reaped tremendous profits at the public's expense," said report
author Jay R. Halfon. "This report details the overwhelming evidence of
the cable industry's abuses, particularly its success at quashing wireline competitors,
who have had the only success impacting cable rates."
"The proposals outlined
today provide a roadmap for action to protect consumers from the cable monopoly,"
Halfon concluded.
Additional contacts:
Jay Halfon, PIRG, 917-318-6158
Mark Cooper, CFA, 301-384-2204
Jeff Chester, CDD, 202-452-9898
Andrew Jay Schwartzman, MAP, 202-232-4300
U.S. PIRG is the national
advocacy office for the state Public Interest Research Groups. State PIRGs are
nonprofit, nonpartisan public interest advocacy groups. www.uspirg.org
The Consumer Federation
of America (CFA) is a non-profit association of 300 pro-consumer groups, which
was founded in 1968 to advance the consumer interest through advocacy and education.
www.consumerfed.org
The Center for Digital
Democracy is a Washington-based nonprofit organization dedicated to maintaining
the diversity and openness of the media, focusing especially on the new broadband
communications platforms. www.democraticmedia.org
Media Access Project
(MAP) is a thirty year old non-profit tax exempt public interest telecommunications
law firm which promotes the public's First Amendment right to hear and be heard
on the electronic media of today and tomorrow. www.mediaaccess.org