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2000-12-07CABLE TV ADVISORY COMMISSION City of Beverly, Massachusetts A! Torsey, chairman; Dan Murphy, Amy Siemasko, Robert Lee, Arthur Crandall, George Johnson Meeting of December 7. 2000 Beverly City Hall-- 4 p.m. Present: Chairman Al Torsey, Dan Murphy, Amy Siemasko, Robert Lee, Arthur Crandall Absent: George Johnson Also attending: William August, Esq., attorney at law, Epstein & August, Boston Tom Scully, Director of Community Services; Jane Lyman - for AT&T. Counsel William August reported he had received a phone call from Nick Leuci, vice president for franchise relations of AT&T Broadband. Mr. Leuci indicated that his company would prefer not to operate local access broadcast studios as in the past. He suggested the CAC investigate operation of a "Local Access" studio. Mr. August told Mr. Leuci that much discussion at the November 28 public hearing concerned incidents of alleged non-compliance by AT& T Broadband with license requirements. He said a letter detailing complaints would be forthcoming. He said operation of the access studio would necessarily be a central part of ongoing renewal negotiations. Lyman said she disagreed that the franchisee was in non-compliance. August said there was a difference in "interpretation." Lyman asked for a realistic list of potential I-Net sites and mentioned it costs about $22,000 a mile to provide cable access. Scully said the Fire Department is seeking the I-Net from Central Station and the Farms station to file reports. The I-Net system in the past had been used for video, audio and some data transmission. August said the former license had required local origination production and programming so the expectation was that there would be continuity. He said the CAC will make the case for franchisee involvement in local origination prngramming and production. Lyman described Local Access Corporations. She said they are set up as non- profit corporations, operate under boards of directors (typically five directors, two appointed by the mayor, one by the Superintendent of Schools and two by the public). They hire staff and direct coverage and programming. They operate with funds formerly used by the franchisee for the existing studio as negotiated. Lyman said it is easier for her company to write a check. Access Corporations operate in several Eastern Mass. communities including Salem, Somerville, Cambridge and Boston. August said Local Corporations have become a trend in the cable TV industry. He said the current studio is being used by Beverly, Hamilton, Wenham, Boxford and Topsfield but with no compensation to Beverly for sharing. Lyman said it was always the company's intention to have a regional studio. She said she would check with Mr. Leuci to clarify his position on Local Corporations. The next meeting of the Cable TV Advisory Commission will be Tuesday, December 19, 2000 at 8 a.m. on the third floor of Beverly City Hall.