[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 33 (Tuesday, March 9, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S1306]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SATELLITE TELEVISION EXTENSION AND LOCALISM ACT OF 2010
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Mr. President, I rise today to urge passage of the
Satellite Television Extension and Localism Act of 2010, or STELA, as
part of the American Workers, State, and Business Relief Act of 2010.
Over the past 15 years, satellite television has grown into a strong
competitor to cable by offering consumers in rural as well as urban
markets a choice in pay television providers. Where residents once were
limited to a single cable operator, satellite providers now offer most
consumers an alternative. This has led to price and service
competition, which is good for consumers. Congress supported such
competition through the passage of the Satellite Home Viewer Act and
its progeny, including the Satellite Home Viewer Extension and
Reauthorization Act, or SHVERA. And now Congress has the same
opportunity with passage of STELA, which reauthorizes and extends
certain communications and copyright provisions.
A decade ago, Congress, recognizing that consumers want access to
local news, weather, and community-oriented programming, established a
mechanism by which satellite providers could offer local broadcast
stations to residents in the local market. This means that when a
satellite subscriber in Huntington, West Virginia tunes-in to CBS, PBS,
ABC, FOX or NBC, they hear about events in the state capital and see
the successes and trials of their neighbors--not the weather in
Manhattan.
Recognizing the limits of satellite providers at the time, Congress
did not require the companies to offer local channels to every market
in the country. Over time, this has created a division between haves
and have-nots in which satellite companies are not providing local
channels to residents in the smallest markets.
In West Virginia, satellite subscribers in the Parkersburg and
Wheeling markets cannot receive local channels from either satellite
provider. In certain other markets in the State, only one provider
offers local channels. Rural consumers deserve better.
That is why I am particularly pleased that STELA provides incentives
to provide local service into all 210 markets across the county, which
sets the stage for consumers in even the most rural regions to gain
access to local news, sports, and community programming.
Another important provision of STELA changes existing law to promote
the carriage of high-definition local public broadcasting stations and
to make it easier for statewide public television networks, like that
in West Virginia and 14 other States, to reach every resident of the
States they serve.
As some broadcast television has become coarser and less informative,
the importance of the mission and programming provided by public
television has grown. STELA makes sure that more satellite subscribers
will have access to the compelling programming available on public
television.
Passage of STELA provides us with the opportunity to encourage
greater competition and access to quality programming to consumers
throughout the nation. For this reason, I urge my colleagues to support
passage of this important legislation.
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