[RFI] Fwd: Fw: SBE Legislative Alert

Jim Brown jim at audiosystemsgroup.com
Mon Apr 5 11:20:03 PDT 2010


If you live in the US, this is something worthy of your time. I strongly 
support this bill. 

Jim Brown K9YC

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From: The Society of Broadcast Engineers <president at sbe.org>
Subject: SBE Legislative Alert
Date: Thursday, April 1, 2010, 12:08 PM

SBE Legislative Alert 
 March 31, 2010
To: All members of the SBE 
The Society of Broadcast Engineers has developed a position statement 
regarding the "The FCC Commissioners' Technical Resource Enhancement Act."  
We encourage all members of SBE to send letters to their Senators and 
Representative in Congress, expressing support for S.2881 and R.4809. We 
have provided a sample letter for you to use as a guideline. 

Vinny Lopez, CEV, CBNT
President

Society of Broadcast Engineers 

 "The FCC Commissioners' Technical Resource Enhancement Act" 

March 31, 2010  

One of the SBE's Legislative Goals is "To promote the maintenance or 
increase of technical expertise within the FCC to ensure that decision 
making by the FCC is based on technical investigation, studies and 
evaluation rather than political expenditures."  The Society of Broadcast 
Engineers supports "The FCC Commissioners' Technical Resource Enhancement 
Act" as an extension of that goal.

Senate bill S.2881 was introduced in December 2009 by Senator Olympia Snowe 
(R-Maine) and co-sponsored by Senator Mark Warner (D-Virginia).  This bill 
would authorize each FCC commissioner to add one staff assistant position 
to the three that are currently authorized. The proposed legislation, which 
would amend Section 4(f)(2) of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 
154(f)(2)), explains that the "staff engineer" would provide each 
commissioner with technical consultation when appropriate and interface 
with the Office of Engineering and Technology, Commission Bureaus and other 
technical staff of the Commission for additional technical input and 
resources. The staff engineer would need to hold an undergraduate or 
graduate degree from an institution of higher education in his or her 
respective field of expertise.

Subsequently, a companion bill (HR.4809) was introduced in the US House on 
March 10 by Representative Jerry McNerney (D) of California..  With a House 
bill now introduced, the legislation will hopefully move through the 
committee process in both chambers of Congress. Introduction of the 
resolution came after representatives of the Society of Broadcast Engineers 
met with his Washington staff on March 3.  The SBE Government Relations 
Chairman Barry Thomas, CPBE CBNT and General Counsel Chris Imlay visited 
offices of several House members over two days to garner support for a 
companion to the Senate bill.

If passed, the new authorization would effectively undo a loosening of 
requirements for technical staff at the highest level of the FCC that began 
more than 25 years ago. The SBE's efforts in support are, among other 
things:
An effort to counter inaccurate or hyperbolic claims by providing 
technical expertise at the policy level.
To help the FCC avoid significant and expensive mistakes resulting from 
decisions made based on political instead of technical realities (for 
example, Broadband over Power Lines).
Enable better commissioner access for the extensive experience and 
expertise currently available at the FCC Bureaus.
The SBE's strategy is to provide education and information to its members 
and chapters so that they can engage in individual advocacy with their 
Senators and Representatives.  The SBE will also submit materials and 
conduct meetings as necessary and will join with strategic partners in 
their efforts to support this legislation.  The SBE encourages chapters to 
host meetings about this topic to educate and engage interested parties.

SBE members are specifically asked to contact their U.S. Representatives 
and Senators and urge them to co-sponsor or at least support House 
Resolution HR.4809 and Senate Bill S.2881, respectively.

We recommend the following details for your individual letters:
Identify the bill by number and title: for example H.R. 4809, the ""FCC 
Commissioners' Technical Resource Enhancement Act". Keep the letter brief 
and on topic - one page at the most.
Ask the Representative to consider becoming a cosponsor and support this 
legislation.
Thank him or her for the consideration.

Simple is better: Representatives and their staffs are looking to gauge 
interest and support for the bill. A lengthy multipage letter that strays 
off topic can detract from the focus of asking for support for this 
specific legislation. 

A sample letter is available here, although letters using your own words 
are preferred.

Should you choose to email the letter, send it as an attachment to the 
email as opposed to including it in the text of the email.  Also, the SBE 
would appreciate receiving a copy of your letter sent to:

John Poray, Executive Director,
Society of Broadcast Engineers
9102 Meridian Ave.
Suite 150
Indianapolis, IN 46260

jporay at sbe.org

Some resources for further research are:

The text of Senate bill S.2881:
http://sbe.org/documents/TextofS.2881.pdf

The text of House Resolution HR.4809:
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/billtext.xpd?bill=h111-4809

Contact information for your U.S. Representative:
http://www.house.gov/zip/ZIP2Rep.html

Contact information for your U.S. Senator:
http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm

The FCC:
http://www.fcc.gov
House Companion Resolution Introduced to S.2881 (March 10, 2010) 

http://sbe.org/pub_sc.php#HouseRes  

Senate Bill S.2881 Clears Senate Committee  (March 25, 2010) 
http://sbe.org/pub_sc.php#SenateClearsS2881

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