Waxman Says DTV Date Likely To Move
House Energy & Commerce Committee chair says date-move would be "only short-term"
By John Eggerton -- Broadcasting & Cable, 1/20/2009 5:24:55 AM
Related:
The DTV Countdown: Complete Coverage of the DTV Transition
Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) says he expects Congress will delay the DTV transition date.
Asked Monday whether he thought the date would move, he said "I think so, but only short-term."
Waxman, newly christened chair of the House Energy & Commerce Committee, was mingling with NBC bigwigs and other Washington notables at a brunch in Washington Monday in advance of Tuesday's inauguration.
Waxman last week proposed a bill that would move the date from Feb. 17 to June 12, as well as speed the distribution of DTV-to-analog converter box coupons, allow viewers to reapply for expired coupons, and take other associated steps.
On a parallell track is a bill from Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) that would simply move the date and leave other issues for another bill. His goal is to get the most easily passable bill through the Congress as quickly as possible.
Congress will have to move fast to move the date, since it is now only four weeks away.
Waxman also said that a mark-up of his version of the DTV date-move bill was still on track for a Wednesday hearing (1:30 p.m.). A mark-up is when legislators discuss and ammend bills before sending a bill along--if it is approved--for a vote in the full House.
Expected to be added to Waxman's draft bill by the mark-up is language related to first responders, who were scheduled to get reclaimed analog TV spectrum Feb. 17 for use in emergency communications. The bill as drafted made no mention of that issue.
Police and firefighters asked Congress for a carveout from any delay bill so it could get access to the spectrum on time.
The incoming Obama administration asked Waxman, Rockefeller and others to move the date after the National Telecommunications & Information Administration announced it was putting requests for DTV-to-analog converter box coupons on a waiting list because it had temporarily run out of money to distribute them.
Private companies, notably Verizon, also are scheduled to get some of that spectrum, but the bill already talks about requiring the FCC to help accommodate those companies, which bid billions for rights to the spectrum at aucion.
-
The problem isn't just the converter boxes it's the fact digital doesn't replicate analog coverage.
I live in Chicago 3 miles NW of Sears Tower, I can't get ANY digital TV stations. I get 16 analog. Oddly enough with an analog set and a converter I get 3 stations, which is more than my digital TV set which gets none. However of those three two are pretty much always pixilated.
Saying "Buy a converter box and you'll be find is simply wrong."
We need to transition market by market. Start at NYC and when everything is worked out there, go to LA, then Chicago and work down.
I don't see why this is so hard to grasp. Should I tell the cat and have him explain it to you, 'cause the cat is gonna get it."
Eric Post - 1/20/2009 2:38:08 PM EST -
please just keep the date as promised February 17th, it's been announced for over 3 years. also 94% of Americans have already made the switch to digital Television. then if the date was changed there would be total disbelief between Americans. Plus i would like to know if America should vote on this decision also to get a better sense on who is really ready or not for the DTV Transition?
Alejandro - 1/20/2009 9:33:29 AM EST
House Working on Bill to Move DTV Date
01/13/2009DTV Delay: House Postpones Mark-Up of Bill
01/21/2009



























