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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Congress debates drop-dead date for digital TV

Associated Press

LAS VEGAS — Rep. Joe Barton, a strong supporter of speeding the shift to digital television, recently bought a new analog TV set — the kind that will be obsolete if Congress mandates a nationwide conversion by the end of next year.

“The salesman absolutely guaranteed that Congress wouldn’t do a thing about it,” the Texas Republican joked while appearing on a panel this week with other congressional leaders at the National Association of Broadcasters convention.

Not true, said Barton, the chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. He intends to introduce a digital transition bill within three weeks.

“It will have a hard date and that hard date could be Dec. 31, 2006,” he told broadcasters.

Proponents believe setting a firm date would bring down the price of digital sets — which can now cost thousands of dollars — and increase production by companies anxious to meet the demand.

“The market is beginning to go digital,” Barton said, noting that about half of all TV sets sold this year will be digital-ready.

The federal government is anxious to make the change because the analog spectrum now used by broadcasters could be used by police and firefighters who are running out of communication frequencies.

Digital, meanwhile, provides sharper pictures than analog and allows broadcasters to offer multiple channels over the same signal.

Still, broadcasters remain wary of a firm transition date, claiming set manufacturers are dragging their feet on producing digital-ready sets even as local stations make the conversion and prime-time programs are available in high definition.

Some of Barton’s colleagues at the convention doubted the political wisdom of setting a definite changeover date within two years.

“I’ve said if we punch out our constituents’ television sets by a premature date certain, they’re going to punch out our political careers by a premature date certain,” said Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y.

Sen. Conrad Burns, R-Mont., said a House bill might not be readily embraced in the Senate.

“We’ve got to make sure that we don’t turn off a lot of television sets in America whenever we make this conversion,” Burns said.

About 21 million homes, or 19 percent of U.S. households, now get TV signals using over-the-air antennas. With the change to digital, those sets would be useless without the addition of a special conversion box.

Barton said his bill would likely include government subsidies for low-income families to ensure that people with analog TVs could afford the boxes expected to sell for about $40.