Edition


Vol. 41, No. 4

A Note from the Chairman Emeritus

The issue is global trade. Over the past eight months, it has become increasingly obvious that trade has become less and less of a priority on Capitol Hill. Trade agreements reached with other countries have not been voted on, and the President’s Trade Promotion Authority has not been renewed.

The Coming Transition from Analog to Digital

In February of 2006, President George Bush signed into law legislation that designates midnight, February 17, 2009, as the date to complete the transition from analog to digital television broadcasting.

Keeping America’s Food Supply Safe and Secure

Although the United States has the safest food supply in the world, the American public is beginning to wonder whether or not they can trust the brands they buy and the food they eat.

DHS Report Card: The Good, The Bad and the Ugly

Earlier this year the House Committee on Homeland Security issued a report card on the department it oversees.

The President’s Vision for Global Trade

The United States Secretary of Commerce discusses what the Bush Administration is doing to improve America’s position with regard to trade around the world.

U.S. Trade Policy: Does it help or hinder U.S. business?

The former U.S. Trade Representative looks back on 60 years of trade policy and shares her thoughts on the challenges that lie ahead.

Doha Do or Die

The current round of multilateral trade negotiations have dragged on for nearly six years. Is time running out on the prospects of reaching an agreement?

What Trade Means to My State

The Governor of Minnesota talks about the importance of trade to residents of his state and what he is doing to strengthen things in that regard.

What Trade Means to the American People

From the coffee we drink in the morning to the iPods we listen to throughout the day, Americans have become accustomed to the benefits of global trade.

Dark Days Ahead?

A storm is brewing on Capitol Hill over the future of U.S. trade policy and the course our nation should take.

Reflections from the Perot Campaign of 1992

The common refrain among those of us who helped build the perot movement is, “If only we had him now.

Soft News, Hard Sell: Treating the audience as Consumers, not Citizens

The media seem to assume that the candidates’ positions on the issues are “old” news, hardly worthy of development.

Ripon Profile of Chuck Grassley

What the GOP must do to reclaim its congressional majority: Put forward a couple of new ideas, get back to our basic principles and convince the public that we’re going to stick to them this time.

The Coming Transition from Analog to Digital

Public safety stands to benefit the most.
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In February of 2006, President George Bush signed into law legislation that designates midnight, February 17, 2009, as the date to complete the transition from analog to digital television broadcasting. Digital television (DTV) is an innovative new type of over-the air broadcasting technology that enables TV stations to provide dramatically clearer pictures and better sound quality.The transition from analog to digital television represents the most significant advancement of television technology since color TV was introduced decades ago.

Who will be affected once the proverbial switch is flipped? Cable, satellite, and telephone companies will take steps to continue providing service for their television subscribers. And anyone already using a digital television with an over-the-air antenna will see no change in service.

But the small number of folks who currently receive free broadcast television programming using an analog television set and an over-the air antenna will need a DTV converter box to continue to receive service. These boxes will be available in early 2008, are expected to cost about $50, and will improve the picture of even old television sets.

We have witnessed many painful events over the last decade that highlighted the critical need for interoperable communications.

Congress also set aside funds for consumers who want help covering the cost of the converter boxes, and the government will issue each household up to two $40 converter box coupons upon request, also starting in early 2008. (More information about the DTV transition and the converter box coupon program is available at www.dtv.gov and www.ntia.doc.gov.)

Not only will the nation’s consumers benefit, our nation’s taxpayers will benefit as the sale of the spectrum currently occupied by the nation’s broadcasters is expected to generate billions of dollars to pay down the debt. But most importantly, with the transition to digital, our nation’s first responders will finally have access to the additional spectrum they need to communicate in times of emergency.

On that cold day in February 2006 when President Bush signed the legislation into law that set the date for the transition to digital television, we also paved the way for broadcasters to clear a spectrum for interoperable public safety communications. I was especially pleased that the new law included my amendment creating a $1 billion federal grant program, paid for by spectrum auction sales to the private sector, which will soon provide public safety officials with much-needed resources to improve interoperability using the additional spectrum the law gives them.

During any disastrous event, it is our nation’s first responders who answer the call of duty and rush into harm’s way, putting their lives on the line. In order for first responders to do their job, they must be able to communicate with one another — not just fire, police, and EMS within one jurisdiction, but also among local, state, and federal jurisdictions.

We have been working over the last decade to provide our first responders with the vital capability to communicate interoperably and our efforts are finally coming to fruition. We have witnessed many painful events over the last decade that highlighted the critical need for interoperable communications.

…with the transition to digital, our nation’s first responders will finally have access to the additional spectrum they need to communicate in times of emergency.

On the fateful morning of September 11, 2001, New York police officers were able to hear the radio warnings from a helicopter that the North Tower of the World Trade Center was glowing red, and most of the police officers exited the building safely – while dozens of firefighters, who could not hear these warnings, tragically perished when the tower collapsed. The radio communications system used by the police was not compatible with the system used by the fire department; consequently, no warnings could be heard and many lives were lost.

Hurricane Katrina also made us acutely aware that we still had much work to do on behalf of our first responders. Coast Guard helicopters plucking survivors from police boats in flooded New Orleans could not communicate with the emergency officials in the rescue boats that were literally just feet below.

We have endured some horrible lessons during 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina as crisis communications during both of these tragic events failed. But we have made great progress, and soon public safety will have access to the 24 megahertz of spectrum they were promised and so desperately deserve.

The 9/11 Commission understood the importance of ensuring that our first responders have the equipment and spectrum necessary to communicate in times of emergency. I’m proud that we were successful in not only passing the DTV transition last Congress, but that we provided a helping hand to enable our first responders to better protect all of America.

Fred Upton represents the Sixth District of Michigan in the U.S. House of Representatives. He is the Ranking Republican on the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet.