Friday, February 21, 2014

RTDNA: FCC News Study Belongs On 'Trash Heap'

Critics of a proposed Federal Communications Commission study that would send researchers into newsrooms across America say the new chairman's vow to tweak the plan doesn't go far enough -- with one leading media group calling on the agency to scrap the study entirely, according to Fox News.

"Where it really needs to go is onto the trash heap," Mike Cavender, director of the Radio Television Digital News Association, said in a statement.

The FCC drew the ire of free-press advocates and lawmakers after proposing a "study of critical information needs," which one dissenting commissioner said would let researchers "grill reporters, editors and station owners about how they decide which stories to run."

FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler pledged to work with the contractor to "adapt the study" in response to concerns that have been raised.

"Before moving forward, however, it is imperative that the FCC ensure that any study, with any agents acting on its behalf, stays out of newsrooms," committee Chairman Fred Upton, R-Mich., and Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., said in a statement.

"The courts have rightfully struck down the Fairness Doctrine, and any attempt to revive it, through study or any other means, should not be attempted by the FCC or any other government agency."


Cavender was unsparing in his criticism of what he called an "ill-conceived study."

The new project also would include newspaper and Internet content and is expected to start this spring with a field test in Columbia, S.C.

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