|
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
|
|
|
April
13, 2007
|
Dennis
Wharton
April 12 - 20 only: 702-943-3525
202-429-5350
|
MORE OPPOSITION EMERGES TO XM/SIRIUS MERGER
WASHINGTON,
DC - NAB this week sent two separate documents to Members of Congress
and their staffs, highlighting mounting opposition to the proposed government
sanctioned monopoly merger of XM and Sirius Satellite Radio.
The first
document came from Philip M. Napoli, director of the Donald McGannon Communication
Research Center at Fordham University, one of the leading progressive
authorities in media policy. Napoli authored an
eight-page report which found that such a merger would "lead
to conditions of both monopoly and monopsony that our antitrust laws are
intended to prevent. The public interest remains better served by the
preservation of competing service providers seeking to provide the best
possible service at the lowest possible price."
Additional
opposition came from former Federal Trade Commission Chairman James C.
Miller, who authored a
letter in opposition to the proposed XM/Sirius merger. "This
is a two-down-to-one merger. There are no other providers in the market."
wrote Miller. "Accordingly, I conclude that the merger of XM and
Sirius would be contrary to the public interest."
The National
Association of Broadcasters retained Napoli and Miller to examine the
proposed satellite radio merger and offer their assessment as respected
experts in the telecommunications and economics arena.
James Miller,
is the former chairman of the Federal Trade Commission and former director
of the U.S. Office of Management and Budget during the Reagan administration.
He received a bachelor's degree from the University of Georgia in 1964,
and a doctorate in economics from the University of Virginia in 1969.
Philip M.
Napoli is an associate professor in the graduate school of business, and
director of the Donald McGannon Communication Research Center at Fordham
University in New York. His research and books have focused on media regulation
and policy, receiving awards from organizations including the Association
for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, the International
Communication Association, the Broadcast Education Association, and the
National Business and Economics Society. Napoli has testified before Congress
and the FCC on media regulation and policy issues and his previous work
has received support from organizations such as the Ford Foundation, the
Benton Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, and the Center
for American Progress. He holds a Ph.D from Northwestern University.
About
NAB
The National Association of Broadcasters is a trade association that advocates
on behalf of more than 8,300 free, local radio and television stations
and also broadcast networks before Congress, the Federal Communications
Commission and the Courts. Information about NAB can be found at www.nab.org.
###
|