Study Finds Virtually No Interference problem with Low Power Radio
Published July 18, 2003
National Association of Broadcasters, NPR, others dead wrong:
- Results have been released from a long anticipated engineering study ordered by Congress — a study designed to determine whether small community radio stations could cause interference to the signals of full power broadcasters. The study, conducted by an independent testing company called the MITRE Corporation, recommended the lifting of burdensome restrictions imposed by Congress in December of 2000 upon the new Low Power FM (LPFM) radio service.
In its testimony before Congress, the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) had complained that the FM radio dial would be drowned in "an ocean of interference." But the study authors found so little evidence of potential interference that they chose not to implement some later stages in the study — such as an economic impact study and subjective listening tests — that would only have been necessary if interference had been proven."
"I hope that the wild goose chase for interference — and the claim that a dinky hundred watt community station can cause this kind of problem for a 20,000 watt commercial station — can finally come to a close." said Pete Tridish, Technical Director of the Prometheus Radio Project.
...."As the result of these bizarre political pressures exerted by the broadcast lobby, the FCC has developed a more extensive complaint procedure for when you turn on a hundred watt station than when you turn on a 50,000 watt station. We proved in 1999 that the interference issue was a red herring, and MITRE has proven it again," said Pete Tridish. "It is time to let low power radio into the cities."
The low power radio service was launched in January 2000, but soon after was curtailed in most metropolitan areas by a debilitating Act of Congress requiring more study before most licenses could be issued. Under pressure from the large broadcasting interests, key Congressmen slipped language into an appropriations rider — language that eviscerated the FCC's new rules in November of 2000. Under the new rules, about 75% of low power FM opportunities were eliminated, leaving only 1 new station available in the top 50 American cities. Smaller towns, further away from major metropolitan areas and their concentrations of megawattage radio stations, were less affected by the bill and allowed to build.
- Study Finds Virtually No Interference problem with Low Power Radio
- Published: July 18, 2003
- Type:
- Section: Politics
- Filed Under: Culture: Media
- Writer: Eric Olsen
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Comments
I did a fucking rebuild - this just sucks flaming balls





I'm not sure why Amazons are missing from a big chunk of posts from '03.