"For too long, we have told the
entertainment industry the federal
government is unwilling to hold them
accountable for their actions..."


Indecency To Cost Broadcasters
and Performers Big Big Bucks

House votes to raise fines to $500,000
for the holders of broadcast licenses.

By CARL HULSE
New York Times


WASHINGTON, March 11 - Saying much of the public is fed up with indecent television and radio programming, members of the House voted overwhelmingly on Thursday to increase penalties on broadcasters and performers who violate federal standards.

Spurred by a racy Super Bowl halftime show, the House voted, 391 to 22, to raise fines to $500,000 for the holders of broadcast licenses and for entertainers, from $27,500 and $11,000, respectively. The measure would also force the Federal Communications Commission to act more quickly on complaints and move to revoke the licenses of repeat offenders.

"For too long, we have told the entertainment industry that the federal government is unwilling to hold them accountable for their actions," Representative Joe Pitts, Republican of Pennsylvania, said. "Today, we are saying, Enough is enough."

The bill, covering just content broadcast over the public airwaves and not cable or satellite programs, was strongly backed by the White House.

"This legislation," the White House said in a statement, "will make broadcast television and radio more suitable for family viewing."

The approval came from 218 Republicans, 172 Democrats and one independent. Twenty-one Democrats and one Republican opposed the bill.

Representative Edward J. Markey, the Massachusetts Democrat who was an author of the bill, said that in addition to the Super Bowl show, the measure had been prompted by the F.C.C.'s lackluster pursuit of complaints about indecency, obscenity or profanity. Despite tens of thousands of complaints from 2001 to 2003, he said, the agency issued 17 notifications that violations had occurred and that fines were possible.

excerpted from:
"House Votes, 391-22, to Raise
Broadcasters' Fines for Indecency."
By CARL HULSE
© New York Times March 12, 2004

[Back to Index]