Sports Technology Meets With Legislators And FCC On "White Spaces" Legislation

The Sports Technology Alliance, formed by the Sports Video Group (SVG) and comprised of major professional and collegiate U.S. sports leagues and major national broadcasters and content distributors, met this week with leading members of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and members of the Senate and House of Representatives. The group's mission was to discuss the negative impact of certain current proposed "white spaces" wireless spectrum legislation with regards to athlete and fan safety at their events and the quality of live event coverage, broadcast production, and the reception of digital television signals.

"This was a very significant, historic day," said Mark Brunner, senior director of industry and public relations for Shure. "To our knowledge, a group of representatives from America's professional and collegiate sports leagues like we had yesterday has never made this kind of visit to Capitol Hill."

Current legislation directs the FCC to allow the distribution of new portable wireless devices that use the spectrum currently in use by wireless microphone systems. The Sports Technology Alliance is concerned that interference from those new radio devices could knock wireless communication systems like headsets used by coaches and officials, as well as microphones used by players and in-car communications off the air and also prevent wireless microphones from being used to enhance coverage and interview players, coaches, and fans.

"The legislation has no solid safeguards to ensure that wireless devices currently used at every sporting event for communications and broadcasts will be free of interference," says Ken Kerschbaumer, editorial director of the SVG, which helped form the alliance along with league representatives and national sports networks. "The negative impact of this legislation will set technology wireless communications technology back more than 30 years. It will also render millions of dollars of existing infrastructure useless, and require leagues, broadcasters, and entertainment producers to go back to wired systems. This would fundamentally change the nature of sports programming from the current state of the art the American public has come to expect."

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