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Some Stations to End Analog TV Signals on Feb. 17

By PETER SVENSSON
,
AP
posted: 294 DAYS 18 HOURS AGO
comments: 23
Text SizeAAA
NEW YORK (Feb. 6) - Television viewers who use antennas and were expecting a few more months to prepare for digital TV may not have much time left before their sets go dark: Many stations still plan to drop analog broadcasts in less than two weeks.
When Congress postponed the mandatory transition to digital TV until June, it also gave stations the option to stick to the originally scheduled date of Feb. 17.
That means the shutdown of analog signals, which broadcasters had hoped would happen at nearly the same time nationwide, could now unfold in a confusing patchwork of different schedules.
Lawmakers wanted to address concerns that many households that receive TV signals through an antenna are not prepared for the switch. They were also mindful that a government fund has run out of money to subsidize digital converter boxes for older TVs.
Dozens of stations around the country now say they are going to take advantage of the option to drop analog broadcasts this month.
Many others are on the fence. The total number is likely to be in the hundreds, a substantial chunk and maybe even a majority of the country's 1,796 full-power TV stations.
The House voted Wednesday to delay the mandatory shutdown until June 12. The Senate passed the measure unanimously last week, and the bill now heads to President Barack Obama for his signature.
The legislation means analog signals could vanish entirely in some areas but persist in neighboring regions. In rural areas, low-power stations will continue to broadcast in analog even beyond June 12.
On Thursday, the Federal Communications Commission ordered stations that still plan to turn off analog signals on Feb. 17 to notify the FCC by Monday.
Acting Chairman Michael Copps said the commission could prohibit stations from making the switch if doing so is not in the public interest. For instance, if all stations in a market want to turn off early, that would draw FCC scrutiny, he said at a commission meeting.
For many broadcasters, delaying the shutdown is inconvenient and expensive. Many of them have scheduled engineering work on their equipment to make the transition on Feb. 17.
The Oklahoma Educational Television Authority, the public broadcasting network in the state, said Thursday that it planned to cease analog transmission from its full-power antennas at 1 p.m. on Feb. 17.
"We have four full-power stations all with 30-year-old-plus analog transmitters that are costly to maintain, putting out less than a quality signal," said Mark Norman, deputy director of technology at OETA.
"Sitting right alongside them are brand-new digital transmitters that have been running now for a few years. We just think it's counterproductive to continue to put money into the old ones."
Keeping the analog equipment in operation until June would cost the station about $200,000 at a time when the state is considering cutting its contribution to the budget, Norman said.
PBS spokeswoman Lea Sloan said about half of the 356 public broadcasting stations across the country will make the switch on Feb. 17. Many will do it for financial reasons. PBS said last month that if all its stations had to delay the switch, it would cost an estimated $22 million.
The Utah Broadcasters Association said the commercial stations in the state still plan to shut down analog on Feb. 17, while the public ones will wait until June.
In Wisconsin, at least two stations in Madison and five in the La Cross-Eau Claire plan to flip the switch on Feb. 17. In Minnesota, at least four stations plan to keep that date, along with five in Iowa.
Copps, the acting FCC chairman, said CBS, Fox, ABC and NBC and Telemundo had committed to keeping the stations they own broadcasting analog until June 12.
Together, they own 85 full-power stations, mainly in large cities. The rest of the stations that carry these networks are affiliates not owned by the network. ABC spokeswoman Julie Hoover said some of its stations may still go early if all other stations in their market do so.
Gannett Co. and Hearst-Argyle Television Inc. also pledged to maintain the vast majority of their stations on analog, Copps said. They own or operate 52 stations.
"These broadcasters deserve our gratitude. I encourage other broadcasters to join them," Copps said.
The transition to digital TV is being mandated because digital signals are more efficient than analog ones. Ending analog broadcasts will free up valuable space in the nation's airwaves for commercial wireless services and emergency-response networks.
In a few areas, including Hawaii, stations have already abandoned analog broadcasting.
TVs connected to cable or satellite services are not affected by the analog shutdown. But that still leaves a lot of people who could see channels go dark on Feb. 17. According to research firm MRI, 17.7 percent of Americans live in households with only over-the-air TV.
Most of them are ready for the analog shutdown, according to the National Association of Broadcasters and analysts at the Nielsen Co. Nielsen said Thursday that more than 5.8 million U.S. households, or 5.1 percent of all homes, are not ready.
At the Oklahoma public broadcasting association, Norman believes viewers are ready for the switch. The network has invited viewers to call in with transition questions on several nights. Each time, the number of callers has been smaller, Norman said.
"We really don't think it's going be as major of an issue as people anticipated," he said.
AP Television Writer David Bauder contributed to this report.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-02-06 08:22:40
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Recent Comments

1 - 10 of 23
23 comments

zoro292003 11:33:07 PM Feb 05 2009

the boxs should have only went too low income families not everyone, most can afford 40$ but too low income that is food. the poor shouldnt have too be poorer

SATCOM1 08:15:07 PM Feb 05 2009

I wonder what all their sponsers think about them changing early???? There goes their commericals to a lot of people...

Donnareed4 06:28:20 PM Feb 05 2009

I am sorry this switch has been in the works for months. People should have did what they were asked when they were told. If some elderly have a problem then family or friends should help them. People who got coupons and selling them on ebay should be fined. They are no better than scalpers at sports games. Their greed is messing up alot of things up. People complain about wasted money have you seen the figuures what it will cost to put this off till June. So not only has my tax dollars paid for the first round of coupons nowwwwwwwwww we have to pay for the hold up. Why don;t these game shows and shows that give away all the prizes , which they get from companies free, just as pontiac gave those cars on the Oprah show,,,yes Oprah didn;t pay for those cars , why don't they donate digital boxes to the elderly. If you have 4 or more Tvs in your home, maybe you have 2 too many!!!!!!!!

NLocke7458 11:15:54 PM Feb 04 2009

The Nielsen Co. estimates that more than 6.5 million U.S. households that rely on analog TV sets to pick up over-the-air broadcast signals still are not ready. People who subscribe to cable or satellite TV or have a newer TV with a digital tuner will not be affected. This above statement is WRONG!! I subscribe to cable but have the basic program only. So all of my analog sets hooked to cable still need the conversion box because we do not need the cable box. You can get the cable boxes for a $4.95 fee each per month or by the box with the coupon for $20.00 each. We have 4 analog sets in the house all on cable. It's not just the people with antennas that need the boxes, it's also everyone who has basic cable.

Dreamweever2 09:36:34 PM Feb 04 2009

The change should not be made until the economy is more stable. Anyone with cable tv or dish would not need converter boxes for the change, but with so many loosing jobs, many people will end up dropping the luxury of cable or dish.

JuFrgs 07:49:32 PM Feb 04 2009

The Repugnants are at it again. You can never get a piece of clean legislation from them and that is why we are in the trouble that we are in now. Tax cuts and tax breaks for the Rich again. Poor Americans do not have the tax write-off that they have and use very well.

Marjorum 07:12:00 PM Feb 04 2009

Attention All Republican LegislatorsNovember 2010 is less than 2 years away. There are a lot of people in this country keeping track of your obstructionist tactics. If we have to vote more of you out of office, we will. Maybe it is time to start doing what the people want and not adhering to the ideology that got our country into this terrible state.

Tmerrimoxie 06:04:34 PM Feb 04 2009

My guess is mostly the elderly are not ready for this change over. They don't have cable, they have their Price-Is-Right, Wheel of Fortune your basic networks. Yes the elderly and poor living on very tight, fixed budget now have to buy a converter. The Consumer Electronics Association warns that a delay could result in a shortage of converter boxes. Manufacturers and retailers have planned inventory based on a Feb. 17 transition date? If they can't be ready for the June 12th date how the hell can they be ready for the February 17 date. Doesn't February come before June? This screams they want their money and they want it now.

OLEARB382 05:50:23 PM Feb 04 2009

Good ideal- now the government has to find incentives for the poor to buy new TV`s. What is Bill Gate doing sitting on all that money that is suppose to help people out, especially the poor. They should give TV`s out free to those that cannot afford one or work something out. How about Oprah - It`s time for those who have it to help the "have nots." Those that do nothing should have the word "GREED" on their toomstone. Or if you are religious St. Peter might ask you what have you done for others to allow you to enter "the pearly gate."

DHelton824 05:49:44 PM Feb 04 2009

How stupid is this . We are going into a deep depression , business is bad every where you look and people do not have jobs . Food is too high and fuel prices are going back up . But our congress is going to worry about this and not our real problems as a nation . Where did our deadhead members of congress learn to be so dumb ?

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