Public Access TV at Risk: Cable Giants Threaten to Cut Funds for Local Stations Across U.S.
As more people cut the cord and drop their cable TV subscriptions, public access channels are losing a vital source of revenue. Cable television companies have paid franchise fees to local municipalities for decades, but those funds are now threatened as cord-cutting accelerates.
As more people cut the cord and drop their cable TV subscriptions, public access channels are losing a vital source of revenue. For decades, cable television companies have paid franchise fees to local municipalities as compensation for use of the public right of way, through which the companies route cables and utilities. Those fees have funded local stations focused on public, educational, and governmental access programming.
"As there's migration to digital entertainment and to streaming, there is no local investment — there's no local jobs, there's no local programming," says Michael Max Knobbe, executive director of BronxNet in New York.
We also speak with Joe Barr, executive director of Access Sacramento in California, who says the station is "of the community, by the community, for the community." He adds that as the corporate media continues to consolidate, "it really could be a dire situation for getting a broad spectrum of viewpoints."