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    Sunday, April 28, 2024

    Your Turn: Lawmakers have opportunity to save public access TV

    Local public access TV or public, educational and government access (“PEG”), has been in Connecticut for over 40 years providing residents, municipalities, schools and community organizations with hyper-local programming that would not otherwise be available. PEG channels were established, as noted by the U.S. Supreme Court, in exchange for “permission to install cables under city streets and to use public rights-of way”.

    In Connecticut, independent non-profits have been encouraged by statute to assume operational responsibility for PEGs. Producers of local media, using volunteers, provide alternative programming to major corporate media companies.

    Your PEG TV station falls into one of three categories: public, a general category for any local content, from talk shows, to religious services and Memorial Day parades; educational, like high school sports, board of education meetings and school events; and government, consisting of town meetings and other municipal events. Collectively, PEG programming allows ANY resident to learn, produce and distribute content to be informed and engaged with their communities.

    How is PEG funded? Cable companies are required by federal and state law to carry this programming and provide adequate funding. In Connecticut, this funding is established on a per customer basis, averaging 68 cents per month.

    A 2007 law change allowed cable companies to obtain certificates allowing them to operate and occupy our public streets endlessly with virtually no oversight. The legislature did reinforce the importance and support for PEG regardless of how cable was transmitted, and PEG is the only direct benefit that is offered to cities and towns.

    SB 278

    Millions of people have cut the cable cord with more expected, due to the high cost of cable, and migration to other services causing a tremendous loss of operating revenue to PEGs. Supplemental fund-raising is undertaken but insufficient to make up the nearly $1.2 million recent decrease.

    During the pandemic, PEGs provided real-time coverage of government, health, religious, educational and community programming accessible to all. Unfortunately, PEG will soon go the way of local town newspapers unless SB 278 is enacted. SB 278 is simply amended language restoring the original funding of PEG: one fee per customer, paid for by cable companies, regardless of technology deployment. SB 278 is not a tax on the internet or anything else.

    Please tell your legislators to support this important legislation to keep public-access television up and running.

    Joanie Wedler, Chuck Lewis and Frank Facchini are all Executive Director/CEOs of CT PEG TV Stations and CT Regional PEG Partners supporting this legislation.

    Your Turn is a chance for readers to submit photos and stories. To contribute, email times@theday.com.

    Comment threads are monitored for 48 hours after publication and then closed.