http://blog.massbroadcasters.org/mba-general/kerry-holds-commerce-hearing-on-consumer-rights-on-television/An excerpt of his opening statement:
The Satellite Home Viewer Extension and Reauthorization Act—or SHVERA—is not the best known piece of communications legislation. Nor is it the most appreciated piece of communications law. But in living rooms across the country, consumers reap the benefits of this law every time they turn on the television set.
To understand why, it is useful to look back more than a decade and a half ago. At that time, a consumer seeking premium pay television service had only one place to go: the cable company.
Today, that same consumer has options. That’s because SHVERA and its legal predecessors ushered in a world where consumers could choose between the cable company and satellite providers like DirecTV and Dish Network.
Choice means competition. It means lower prices. It means more programming innovation. It means more viewing packages to choose from. And it means greater incentives for companies to develop new digital technology for program viewing.
I might add an important personal note here – all that competition, pricing, innovation and viewing packages are also very important to Red Sox Nation now that the playoffs are here.
This is something I did not know:
Today, there are more than twenty Nielsen markets across the country where satellite service does not provide local broadcast channels. Instead of hearing information about local news, weather, and sports, consumers get information from places far from home and far from relevant to the lives they lead.
This is a situation that demands our attention. Although in the past Congress has not required satellite services to offer local channels to every market in the country, it’s time to consider how to remedy this situation.
I haven't had a chance to look at the hearing, but here is the link to it:
http://commerce.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Hearings.Hearing&Hearing_ID=8bfd7648-9fe0-4d82-ad1f-2a2477199635I know it may sound strange and perhaps shallow, but on a day to day basis, the issues before this committee affect people more than other more "serious" issues like war in Afghanistan, global climate change, and health care reform. Um, Americans love their TV and increasingly their internet and smart phones. Not to mention how they get their news will be a huge issue in the coming years.