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Hope and Change? Obama moves to block digital TV switch...

Volpone

Zombie Hunter
For someone who claims to be in favor of "change you can believe in", Obama sure seems to be pushing for the status quo.
Obama: Let's Postpone Digital TV Switch
Thursday, January 08, 2009
AP

WASHINGTON — President-elect Barack Obama is urging Congress to postpone the Feb. 17 switch from analog to digital television broadcasting, arguing that too many Americans who rely on analog TV sets to pick up over-the-air channels won't be ready.

In a letter to key lawmakers Thursday, Obama transition team co-chair John Podesta noted that the Commerce Department has run out of money for coupons to subsidize digital TV converter boxes for consumers.

People who don't have cable or satellite service or a new TV with a digital tuner will need the converter boxes to keep their older analog sets working.

Obama officials are also concerned that the government is not doing enough to help Americans — particularly those in rural, poor or minority communities — prepare for and navigate the transition.

"With coupons unavailable, support and education insufficient, and the most vulnerable Americans exposed, I urge you to consider a change to the legislatively mandated analog cutoff date," Podesta wrote.

In 2005, Congress required that broadcasters switch from analog to digital broadcasts, which are more efficient, to free up valuable chunks of wireless spectrum.

The newly available room in the airwaves can be used for commercial wireless services and for emergency-response networks.

Podesta's letter went to the top Democrats and Republicans on the Senate and House Commerce committees. Because Congress set the Feb. 17 date, it would have to pass a new law to postpone it.

Obama's request for a delay is a victory for Consumers Union, which had asked for a postponement of the digital TV shift.

"We are extremely pleased the incoming administration is supportive of consumer efforts to ensure that the poor, elderly and rural consumers do not face economic hardship as we move broadcasting to digital transmission," said Gene Kimmelman, the group's vice president for federal policy.

The Obama team decided to push for a delay after the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, an arm of the Commerce Department, said Monday that it had hit a $1.34 billion funding limit set by Congress to pay for converter box coupons.

The coupon program allows consumers to request up to two $40 vouchers per household to help pay for the boxes, which generally cost between $40 and $80 each and can be purchased without a coupon.

The NTIA said it had no choice but to start a waiting list for coupon requests as of Jan. 4, meaning that consumers who applied after that would be unlikely to receive their vouchers before Feb. 17. Congress would need to step in with more money or new accounting rules to get the program back on track.

In his letter, Podesta said government funding for both the coupon program and educational efforts for consumers is "woefully inadequate." He said Obama plans to include resources to help consumers through the digital transition in the economic recovery package now being developed with Congress.
I quoted the whole story because, while the "defender of the poor and downtrodden" stuff near the top is amusing and all, it is Obama's toadie, Podesta's, claim that "we haven't had enough time to prepare" that is the best. Haven't had enough time!? :lol: C'mon. I'll admit, I don't have my coupon. But then again my TV is in storage. And push came to shove I could go out and pay the 40 bucks for a converter box without one. For that matter, it would give me an excuse to get a nifty new LCD and retire my trusty 19" Zenith. But I digress. The point is that they've been running that fucking ad for over a year. Anyone who hasn't seen it at this point probably needs a voucher for a TV as well--possibly a head. Because there is no way that you could've missed that in February analog TV is going away.
 
Some people don't. My mom doesn't. Out in the sticks, she can't get cable. And I can't see a dish working for her.

I don't have cable or satellite because I'm a Cheap Bastard. There just isn't that much on TV that I think it's worth paying $30 a month to get. :shrug:

The past couple years cable has been included everywhere I've lived.
 
I don't really know how to approach this one from a libertarian perspective so I've decided not to care. :bergman:
 
I got my coupons a while back, and even with the boxes, the picture of the local stations still tends to blur every now and then. The only difference is now that I can get FOX and the CW, where I used to have cable to get them, since there wasn't a local affiliate.

I will probably get the very cheap cable eventually. It's like $9 a month and I don't have to deal with yet another remote. That's what I hate about that stupid converter box, it's like having cable in the old days when you used to have that box and the remote.

:(
 
See, my problem is my emergency portable TV's. I have two handhelds that are now useless for anything other than portable video monitors. I'll have to get new digital handhelds.
 
It would be ironic if it didn't have a remote--just "analog" VHF and UHF knobs and you had to get up and go change the channel by hand. :lol:
 
I think the whole thing should be delayed a little while longer.

Why anyone would wait this long to get the coupons is beyond me, but some are doing it.

I live in a rural area about 80 miles from all the TV towers. I have one TV set that runs off an outside aerial... the rest are satellite. The reception on the one isn't that great. I've had to set up the boxes for a lot of the elderly in my area, and they're getting shit for reception off those things too.

In tandem with more money for the coupons, I think the FCC should allow the stations to up their broadcasting signal strength so they can reach out to the more rural areas.

Of course, it all boils down to this: anything the federal government touches is going to be a giant screw-up anyway.
 
Well, the argument that "we've not had enough time to prepare" is utter bullshit.

The planned switch from analog to digital has been delayed at least a couple of times. This event has been in the works for, what, a decade? How much more fucking time do they really need?

Of course, it's in Obama's best interest to delay the change. His key demographic, the unmotivated, couch sitter, with one hand on the remote and the other hand extended forward, palm up, who's always looking longingly to Uncle Sam for the next handout, who's too goddamned lazy to go out to get the ultra-cheap converter won't be up to speed. How's Saint Barack going to spread the love to those sharp folks who put him in the big chair next to the button if they can't tune in with what they've already got in the Rent-a-Center entertainment unit?
 
Shit, the poor should spend less time watching TV anyways. Maybe they would get out and get a job and/or exercise some of that fat away.

We need that bandwidth to build new technological infastructure and keep our economy at the head of the curve.
 
I thought the government already auctioned off the airwaves freqs. They going to renege?

We can't push on with awesome wireless capabilities until tv moves to digital. :bailey:
 
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