Groups oppose broadcast signal loan bill
Four groups sent a letter Tuesday to Rep. Tom Bliley, chairman of the Committee on Commerce, opposing a bill that would subsidize businesses providing broadcast signals to rural areas via cable, satellites or wireless technology.
Four groups sent a letter Tuesday to Rep. Tom Bliley, chairman of the Committee
on Commerce, opposing a bill that would subsidize businesses providing broadcast
signals to rural areas via cable, satellites or wireless technology.
"The main point of this is that government can't predict what the best technology
is to reach out and touch the market in these rural areas," said Erik Gustafson,
director of communications and technology policy for Citizens for a Sound
Economy. "The market will fashion a solution," he said.
Under the bill, the Agriculture Department would guarantee loans totaling
$1.25 billion. Each loan could not exceed more than $100 million, except
one, which could not exceed $625 million.
The others that signed the letter include James Gattuso, vice president
for policy and management at the Competitive Enterprise Institute; Adam
Thierer, Alex Walker Fellow in economic policy at The Heritage Foundation;
and Thomas Schatz, president of Citizens Against Government Waste.
The letter said that the Rural Local Broadcast Signal Act "will increase
the role of government in private markets and distort innovation and investment
in the developing communications market."
The bill is currently before the Committee on Commerce.
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