To: Board of Supervisors
From: Supervisor Mike Wilson
Agenda Section: Initiated by Board Member
SUBJECT:
title
Elimination of Local News Programming As a Result of Suddenlink, Cox Media Group Contract Dispute (Supervisor Mike Wilson)
end
RECOMMENDATION(S):
Recommendation
That the Board of Supervisors:
1. Receive the report;
2. Authorize the chair to sign the attached letter;
3. Discuss potential action; and
4. Take other action as necessary
Body
SOURCE OF FUNDING:
N/A
DISCUSSION:
Beginning on Friday, Jan. 8, local TV stations KIEM-3 (Redwood News), an NBC affiliate, and CBS affiliate KVIQ were no longer offered to Humboldt County residents on Suddenlink's cable lineup. It appears a contract dispute related to the retransmission consent agreement between Suddenlink and Cox Media Group (CMG), which owns both local stations, led to the disruption in service. Many local residents have voiced concern to elected officials as this disruption in service prevents residents from receiving local programming and news, which is especially important considering local conditions related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Local and state officials have limited ability to affect national corporate decisions related to local programming. Due to a change in state law, namely the Digital Infrastructure and Video Competition Act (DIVCA), which took effect in 2014, many cable companies that operate in California including Suddenlink operate under state-issued franchises, and not local franchises. These companies contract with TV stations to retransmit their programming through their wireline cable service. Those contracts come up from time to time, and renegotiation of the contract between Suddenlink and CMG led to this dispute.
Regulations guiding how cable operators function is ultimately governed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and Congress. However, as shown with the DIVCA law, which dramatically scaled back the role that local government and the s...
Click here for full text