Sinclair Calls For National Spectrum Audit

The broadcaster urges Congress to postpone any auction considerations until after a thorough spectrum audit is completed.

The proposal in Congress to auction a 120 MHz portion of the broadcast television spectrum would disenfranchise millions of Americans, seriously damage local TV and raise meager revenues for the U.S. budget deficit, according to officials at Sinclair Broadcast Group.

In a statement issued today, Mark Aitken, VP of advanced technology for Sinclair said: “Spectrum auctions would cause big pain for very little gain. “Forty-six million Americans rely exclusively on over-the-air broadcasting. It is the only reliable medium everyone uses during catastrophes when the cable goes out and the satellite dishes have blown off roofs.

America cannot get this back after it is sold. Congress should postpone any auction considerations until after a thorough spectrum audit is completed.”

Sinclair offered a review of what it called the issue’s key facts:

  • “All nine of Detroit’s local TV stations would likely go off the air under the proposal to auction 40% of broadcaster spectrum. It says 50%-100% of the TV stations in 22 cities would be left without a new channel assignment. Up to 131 stations nationwide would be forced off the air.”
  • “TV stations located 360 km (224 miles) south of the Canadian border cannot be reassigned channels without violating U.S.-Canada treaty.”
  • “The claim of a “looming spectrum crisis” is not supported by facts. Instead, the nation faces a spectrum management failure.”
  • “The entire block of 108 MHz of spectrum returned to the government by broadcasters during the 2009 DTV transition went unsold and now lies fallow.”
  • “Officials at Verizon, Sprint and elsewhere acknowledge there is no spectrum shortage, as claimed by auction proponents.”
  • “An independent analysis conducted by Citigroup found that wireless companies are using only 192 MHz of the 838 MHz available to the industry.”
  • “Nearly 1,500 MHz of spectrum has been identified by the U.S. Commerce Department that may be available for reassignment, including 115 MHz that could be used for wireless broadband on a swift timetable.”
  • “The federal government is the single-biggest squatter of the so-called “prime spectrum” (225 MHz-3.7 GHz). Federal entities control 70% of this spectrum and the Government Accountability Office has found federal entities are using it inefficiently.”
  • “Countless jobs at hundreds of local TV stations forced off the air and related businesses would be at serious risk in what is already a down economy with high unemployment.”
  • “According to the Congressional Budget Office, a spectrum auction would raise a meager $6.5 billion for the U.S. Treasury to offset a $1.5 trillion budget deficit (representing 0.4% of the deficit).”
  • “Legislation to audit the spectrum (H.R. 3125) passed overwhelmingly (394-18) in the U.S. House last year but died in the Senate.

Sinclair concluded saying: “Congress should pass legislation mandating a thorough spectrum audit and formulate a national spectrum policy before it proceeds with any auction considerations.”


Comments (4)

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Ellen Samrock says:

November 1, 2011 at 1:07 pm

Yep, these are all of the inconvenient truths that wireless broadband providers and their enablers, the CEA and CTIA, want Congress to ignore. But let Sinclair’s call serve as a PSA that is continuously run until it gets pounded into Congress that all of these bullet points, these issues, must be explored before a vote is taken.

mike tomasino says:

November 1, 2011 at 1:57 pm

-“The entire block of 108 MHz of spectrum returned to the government by broadcasters during the 2009 DTV transition went unsold and now lies fallow.” Should be “an entire block”, as in D block. Not the entire 108 MHz.

Meagan Zickuhr says:

November 1, 2011 at 4:23 pm

They have and it is called the AOM!!!!! Congressman Dingell has requested and Mr. G… at the FCC said, “No! Not until you authorize the Auctions!” The FCC KNOWS the info in this report will be damaging to the broadcast Industry and they are not going to show it to anyone!

Andrea Rader says:

November 1, 2011 at 8:21 pm

Sinclair was proven right on the choice of 8-VSB over COFDM, and I suspect a spectrum audit would be unfavorable to the wireless industry. However, once again I suspect they will be on the losing end of the argument versus more well-heeled adversaries.