UPDATE 4-FCC chief proposes to relax media ownership ban
(Adds Gannett comment)
By Peter Kaplan
WASHINGTON, Nov 13 (Reuters) - The head of the U.S. Federal Communications Commission on Tuesday proposed that the agency relax its ban on the cross-ownership of newspapers and broadcast stations in the 20 biggest U.S. cities.
The "relatively minor" rule change would help bolster the newspaper industry by allowing owners in the top markets to buy a TV or radio station, FCC Chairman Kevin Martin said.
The plan is less ambitious than the 2003 proposal that would have lifted the ownership restrictions in many more markets.
That proposal was struck down by the federal courts the following year.
Martin said it was the only change he was seeking. "I think this is a balanced approach," he said.
Martin outlined the proposal in a column published on Tuesday in The New York Times. The agency issued a formal announcement later on Tuesday morning.
"A company that owns a newspaper in one of the 20 largest cities in the country should be permitted to purchase a broadcast TV or radio station in the same market," Martin wrote in an editorial page opinion piece. "But a newspaper should be prohibited from buying one of the top four TV stations in its community." Continued...







