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SEATTLE -- The Federal Communications Commission got an earful Friday at a packed media ownership hearing in Seattle. Although the public was given just five business days' notice, more than 1,100 concerned citizens crowded into Seattle's Town Hall to oppose new rules that would allow big companies to swallow up more local media.

"The turnout in Seattle was phenomenal -- in sheer numbers, but also in the breadth and depth of testimony," said Jonathan Lawson, director of Reclaim the Media. "Despite the absurdly short notice, which kept many out-of-state, rural and working people from attending, the Commissioners heard hours of impassioned and articulate testimony from people across the Northwest, and from across the political spectrum. That more than 1,100 people sacrificed their time to attend this fly-by-night hearing demands that they be heard all the way in Washington, D.C."

State and federal elected officials joined local residents in speaking out against consolidation. Washington Governor Christine Gregoire chastised FCC Chairman Kevin Martin for not giving Washingtonians ample time to prepare for the hearing, adding: "We need competition, not concentration. We need diversity, vitality and local perspectives. I ask you to ensure that our citizens have access to multiple sources of information and perspectives."

Alarm over media consolidation crossed party lines. "I have a number of concerns with the hearings process and the underlying policy proposals," said Republican State Attorney General Rob McKenna. County Councilmember Reagan Dunn added, "I'm a Republican and I'm a capitalist. But some areas of our private sector must be regulated."

Washington Sen. Maria Cantwell (D) and Reps. Jay Inslee (D) and Dave Reichert (R) sent recorded statements expressing concern over the impact of media concentration on local Northwest communities. On Thursday, Sen. Cantwell co-sponsored the "Media Ownership Act of 2007," a bipartisan bill introduced by Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.) and Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.) that would put the brakes on Chairman Martin's plan to gut media ownership limits by the end of the year.

"Did you ever notice that the FCC is always ready to run the fast break for Big Media, but it's the four-corner stall when it comes to serving the public interest?" asked FCC Commissioner Michael Copps in his opening statement.

The FCC listened to two panels comprised of publishers, broadcasters, community activists, academic experts, industry representatives and union leaders. Throughout the night, opponents of consolidation were treated to boisterous cheers and standing ovations from the large crowd.

"In a town where over 50 percent of this community is Latino, our radio station is the only media owned by Latinos," said panelist Erubiel Valladares Carranza of KPCN-LP, a farmworker-owned-and-operated radio station in Woodburn, Ore. "We need more low power FM, and less corporate radio standing in our way."

The Seattle hearing was the sixth and last of a series of public forums being held across the country by the FCC as it considers whether to lift longstanding media ownership limits. Past hearings were held in Los Angeles; Nashville, Tenn.; Harrisburg, Pa.; Tampa, Fla.; and Chicago, Ill.

"I have watched, listened to or attended all of the six hearings," said Timothy Karr, campaign director of Free Press. "One thing is clear. The public is overwhelmingly opposed to any rule changes that would unleash a new wave of media consolidation. Despite what high-paid industry lobbyists have told you on their daily rounds at the FCC, media consolidation is bad for us all. Do your jobs and do the right thing for the benefit of our democracy."

The FCC's lack of public notice for the hearing had many local residents skeptical about the federal agency's willingness to listen to the overwhelming public opposition to the proposed changes.

"I am afraid that these hearings are just cosmetic," said David Deschler, emeritus faculty of Cornell University. "By participating in this hearing I am colluding with a mere marketing exercise designed to hide the fact that the decision about media ownership has already been made."

The short notice did not stop two 12-year-old sisters, Amanda and Irena Anderson. In her testimony Amanda said, "I am against media consolidation because kids are the future and that's me. I believe a diverse media ownership would be healthier for our democracy."

The Seattle Town Hall was full before the hearing had even started, with dozens lined up hours in advance for their chance to give two minutes of testimony. More than 270 people signed up to speak, and the hearing ran until 1 a.m.

"Here tonight, residents of the Pacific Northwest have the last word," concluded Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein.

For more information on the Seattle hearing visit www.reclaimthemedia.org or www.StopBigMedia.com/=seattle

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