SF Public Access Producers Picket Soon-To-Be Closed Facility
December 1, 2009
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Tracy Rosenberg
(510) 684-6853 Cell
SF
Public Access Producers Picket Soon-To-Be Closed SF Facility: Troubled
Transition to a New Operator Under Statewide Franchising
Today
at 4:00pm, community producers will gather at the former Access San
Francisco facility at 1720 Market Street in San Francisco (now called
SF Commons and slated for closure on December 20th) to ask San
Francisco city government to protect access to the public channels.
Now
operated by SF nonprofit organization The Bay Area Video Coalition
under greatly reduced funding due to the 2005 DIVCA Act (Digital
Imaging and Video Competition Act), and on the heels of the
well-publicized loss of most of the PEG (Public, Educational and
Governmental) infrastructure in the Los Angeles metropolitan area last
year, the producers say that BAVC, under lax supervision from the city,
is dismantling the facility and endangering local community media.
The
producers state the facility is being shut down months prior to the end
of the lease, with no plans to provide alternate studio space, and
further, that producers who don't have independent television equipment
or the resources to rent equipment and production space will no longer
be able to create programming for the public channels.
Media
Alliance Executive Director Tracy Rosenberg says "When we read the
proposal for BAVC to take over the operations, we were concerned that
access for the public to resources and training would be compromised,
especially for lower-income producers".
Public
access channels are provided by cable giants as a municipal resource in
return for a monopoly franchise which provides huge profits for the
franchisee (Comcast for the majority of San Francisco residents). The
2005 DIVCA Act removed the ability of local municipalities like San
Francisco to negotiate cable agreements independently with the telecoms
and endangered funding for PEG channel operations throughout the state
of California.
The
Bay Area Video Coalition, well-respected media arts nonprofit in San
Francisco, bid for the city contract after the former operator said the
operating budget was insufficient. The San Francisco Board of
Supervisors approved a 1.15% fee to aid PEG facilities and negotiated a
one-time settlement of $375,000 from Comcast to aid operating costs for
the 2010 year, providing over $500,000 in funding for the next 12
months.
The
CAP Act (The Cable Preservation Act), H.R. 3745, was recently
introduced in the House of Representatives by Rep. Tammy Baldwin to
reverse the damage caused to PEG channels by the introduction of
statewide cable franchising acts in 24 states across the country,
including California.
(In the interests of transparency, Media Alliance discloses that we
produce a 30-minute program on the SF public access station twice a
month called Media News, which has aired since July of 2009. Media
Alliance played no role in organizing today's action).