Keeping the Public Out of Public Access
Hawaiian Style
(Hawaii's Public Access Television Corporations Speak Out Against Democracy-
-A Case Study) - by Ed Coll
You'd think that access corporations, the folks that run public access television
here in Hawaii would be fierce defenders of
democracy. After all, the intent of the 1984 Cable Rights Act was to provide
individual citizens access to electronic free
speech. Public access television was intended to be an electronic mainstreet
where opinions and ideas on which a viable
democracy is based flow freely. You'd think access corporations would be all for
democracy, but you'd be mistaken.
Hawaii's access corporations; 'Olelo (Oahu), Akaku (Maui), Na Leo 'O Hawaii
(Hawaii), and Ho'ike (Kauai) have all
testified before the Senate Committee on Communications and Public Utilities in
opposition to having their boards
democratically elected by the cable subscribers who fund them.
Public Access Today
All the access corporations claim nonprofit 501 (c) 3 status yet these
organizations appear to be political
subdivisions of the state with a board consisting of political and cable company
appointees. The Governor appoints the
director of the Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs (DCCA). The
director of DCCA appoints a majority of the
board members. The remaining board members are appointed by the cable
companies. These access corporations have no
membership. The access corporations are funded by assessing the cable
companies up to 5% of their annual gross revenues.
All the cable companies in Hawaii have passed the entire cost of funding public
access onto the cable subscriber. So it is the
cable subscriber who funds the access corporations, but subscribers have no
vote in electing the board members who
control the resources, policies, procedures, and spend the cable subscriber's
money.
Don't Let that Sunshine In
With such hierarchical top down control by the State of Hawaii in the
appointment of access corporation board
members, one would think the State Sunshine Law would allow for public
oversight. According to a preliminary opinion by
the State Office of Information Practices (OIP) the level of State involvement
does not rise to the level of an "agency" nor do
access corporations perform a governmental function, and finally they do not
receive any financial assistance from the State
government. Conclusion, access corporations are not covered by State
Sunshine Laws. Although the State assesses a
percentage of the cable companies gross revenues which the cable companies
pass onto the cable subscriber to fund the
access corporations, none of that money passes through the State's general
fund, and therefore is not considered
"government financing". A clever way to circumvent Sunshine, legally extract
money from cable subscribers, and deny them
any meaningful participation in the process. Hawaii's access corporations are
fond of referring to themselves as "the people's
television", but open the doors and where are the people? Taxation without
representation? The OIP opinion was requested
by the access corporations Akakua (Maui) and Ho'ike (Kauai) when members of
the public tried to use the Sunshine Law to
obtain information about their activities.
We Can't Control the Content but we Can Delay Your Access
If access corporations were sincerely interested in providing the public
access to television, they could set up and
turn on a camera, microphone, and video tape recorder and let people speak
their mind. Perhaps not the most exciting and
dynamic form of television, but it would provide the basic access envisioned by
the framers of the 1984 Cable Rights Act.
Instead the eager public access producer is met with a barrage of intimidating
forms, and training programs that lasts weeks
and even months in the case of 'Olelo (Oahu). After completing a highly
subjective, non-performance based, and poorly
planned certification process the access producer must schedule production and
post production equipment often months in
advance. After the program is produced the access producer must schedule the
program for cablecast which means more
intimidating forms and more delay. It could easily take a year or longer for a
beginning access producer to see their first
program reach an audience.
These access corporation rules, procedures, training, forms, scheduling, and
delays effectively discourage all but the most
dedicated access producer, and in effect is a regime designed to disenfranchise
the majority of the subscribers who fund the
corporations. The result is far less than 1/100th of the eligible producers are
being served by any access corporation in
Hawaii.
Whereas and be it Further Resolved
The title of SR 65 and SCR 77 introduced by Senator Carol Fukunaga chair
of the Communications & Public
Utilities committee was called "URGING THE NON-PROFIT PUBLIC ACCESS
CORPORATIONS TO ALLOW
MORE PARTICIPATION BY THE CABLE SUBSCRIBERS WHO FUND THEM".
Basically the resolution would allow
cable subscribers to elect the board members by majority vote through a ballot
process at each corporation's annual meeting.
Sounds like the democratic thing to do. Anyone have a problem with that? Yep.
Guess Who?
Submitted testimony of:
Na Leo 'O Hawaii: "The board of Na Leo 'O Hawaii, Inc does not support
Senate Concurrent Resolution 77."
Ho'ike: "Ho'ike: Kaua'i Community Television, Inc. does not support this
resolution."
Akaku: "Akaku: Maui Community Television does not support SCR 77."
'Olelo: "Speaking Against Senate Concurrent Resolution 77"
The Illusion of Participation
Why did every access corporation in the State of Hawaii stand united
against what appears on its face to be a
democratic process? Because access corporation boards are suffering under
the illusion that they already provide for public
participation.
Submitted testimony of:
Na Leo 'O Hawaii: "The public has ample opportunity to make its views
known and considered by the board."
Ho'ike: "Our Board of Directors is currently appointed through an island wide
nomination process."
Akaku: "Our current board was composed after a careful evaluation of
criteria needed by the organization in order to
serve the public."
'Olelo: (In addition to open board meetings and open forums) "Olelo has also
formed policy advisory committees,
including the Educational Policy Advisory Committee, Community Policy
Advisory Committee, and the Government
Users Group."
Despite the self congratulatory back patting Hawaii's access corporations give
themselves for being so open to public input,
the irrefutable facts are this input is only "advisory" and the Director of DCCA
and the Cable companies appoint the board
based on board recommendations. Surprisingly there is a high incidence of
current board members recommending
themselves for future board appointment. Open meetings, advisory committees,
and island wide nominations create an
illusion of participation but the substance of real decision making power is
beyond the people and reserved for those who
appoint the board.
Democracy Would Destroy Public Access
Not only do Hawaii's access corporations feel they are doing a fine job in
fostering public participation, they also
feel a democratically elected board is a bad idea.
Submitted testimony of:
'Olelo: "Any move toward a membership organization with general elections
for board members would be detrimental
to the future of PEG access. A membership election process will create
special interest groups...".
Ho'ike: "Ho'ike supports the position taken by 'Olelo: The Corporation for
Community Television's position on this
resolution."
Na Leo 'O Hawaii: "Na Leo 'O Hawai'i Inc. supports the position of 'Olelo:
The Corporation for Community
Television. particularly as it addresses the issue that agendas that special
interest might have could adversely effect the
future of PEG access."
Akaku: "We are concerned that a membership driven access organization
would risk 'stacking', or placement of
Board members by the public for self serving interests , which may not
necessarily serve the best interest of the
organization or the public."
Isn't democracy a messy affair? Give people the right to vote and the next thing
you know they are forming "special interest
groups" to further their own self interest. What access corporations see as a
problem with democracy I view as its essence.
Evidently the access corporations feel the democratic processes upon which our
country is based would be detrimental to
public access. It seems Hawaii's access corporations don't believe in
participatory democracy. They don't even believe in
representational democracy. They don't believe in democracy period. The
access corporations would probably consider it
irresponsible to suggest that cable company and politically appointed board
members might have their own agenda and be
serving their own special interest. I consider it the height of arrogance for access
corporations to assume that only they and
not the public are capable of rising above self interest, but in their Orwellian
world view I guess some people are more equal
than others and are entitled to have their hands on the levers of power.
The High Cost and Low Participation of the Democratic Process
Submitted testimony of:
'Olelo: "We know of only two of over 1,000 access centers in the United
States that have established a member
driven election process by cable subscribers: Montgomery Community
Television in Maryland and Access
Sacramento in California. Only one percent participation was experienced for
both Montgomery, with a subscriber
base of 190,000, and Access Sacramento, with a subscriber base of
225,000." "A single bulk-mail notification to
O'ahu cable subscribers would cost $17,000 in postage alone."
Ho'ike: "Of the two access centers that tried to adopt a member-driven
election process, they experienced only a one
(1) percent participation." "... help us avoid a costly and ineffective member-
driven election process."
Akaku: "I personally have had direct interaction with a mainland PEG access
center that is membership driven. It has
allegedly at times been dangerously self-serving to certain board members."
Does it cost too much and is the turnout too small to give subscribers the vote?
Only two access corporations have a
membership driven election process? I don't think so. Citizens Television, Inc.
an access corporation in New Haven,
Connecticut has a membership driven election process to elect board members.
I guess O'lelo didn't look very hard for
successful examples. Perhaps it's not in their best interest to do so. They
certainly didn't look at station KQED of San
Francisco, California. KQED founded in 1954 is one of public television's
flagship stations. In 1992 faced with severe
budget cuts they adopted "... a subscriber elected board, which it felt was
central to KQED's approach to its fiscal crisis."
Another flagship public television station WQED in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
may follow suit if their members who formed
"The QED Accountability Project" have anything to say about it.
Hawaii"s access corporations attempt to portray the membership-driven election
process as a failed experiment when in fact
the public access and public television stations who have membership elected
boards are leaders in affording meaningful
public participation. Even if only one percent of O'lelo's 250,000 subscribers did
show up to vote at the annual board
meeting you'd need a pretty big room to hold 2500 people. Pardon my analysis,
but 2500 voters seems more democratic
that allowing the Director of DCCA and the cable companies to appoint the
board.
O'lelo need not spend $17,000 in postage. I've got a real money saving idea.
Access corporations could use the public
access channels they control to inform people about the annual meeting and the
big vote. They could even let potential board
members use the channel to run for the board.
It's an Alice In Wonderland World
Hawaii's cable subscribers are slowly waking up to a real life Orwellian
nightmare reminiscent of the novel
"Fahrenheit 5 41" where the fire department went around setting fires instead of
putting them out. Hawaii's access
corporations with a mandate to provide electronic free speech to the public are
unified in their opposition to democratic
processes. Forming a cabal led by the 2-million-dollar a year subscriber
subsidized access corporation 'Olelo, Hawaii's
access corporations are vigorously united in support of the status quo.
Their real mandate? Could the mandate be to maintain non-democratic,
authoritarian, politically appointed boards? Their
testimony to the Senate Communications and Public Utilities Committee speaks
volumes about why public access
corporations are denying the public access. It should be obvious to the most
casual observer that the more democratic public
access television becomes the better it will serve the people that fund it.
(c) copyright 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, by Ed Coll
Permission granted to reproduce and distribute at will in original form for non-
profit purposes.