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Bill asks FCC to curb violence on TV during kids’ ‘safe harbor’


WASHINGTON (BP)–Two southern Democrats are teaming up to create what they call a “safe harbor” of television programming for kids by forcing the federal government to crack down on violent TV shows, CNSNews.com reported Feb. 12.

The measure, called the Children’s Protection from Violent Programming Act, would require the Federal Communications Commission to “prohibit the distribution of violent television programming” during times when kids are most prone to watch TV, according to Rep. Ronnie Shows, D.-Miss., the chief House sponsor of the bill being introduced.

Shows said in a statement that an identical bill also will be introduced in the Senate by Sen. Ernest Hollings, D.-S.C., as a response to increasing levels of violence and sexual content on television programs.

Television executives and programmers have taken several measures in recent years to reduce violent content on TV, including a voluntary program rating system and an electronic V-chip to let parents block objectionable programs from their home televisions.

But, Shows said, those measures have been ineffective. “The national television industry has been using a voluntary system of rating [TV] programs for several years. These ratings have failed to reduce violence on television,” Shows said.

Shows did not mention the recent Florida court case in which a jury found a teenage boy guilty of murder in the death of a young girl who died after the boy imitated a series of professional wrestling maneuvers on her, but he alluded to such acts being showed on television.

“Our children are being inundated with visuals of murder and beatings, and mindsets of violent behavior and immorality,” Shows said. “We must act on behalf of our nation, our families and our future.”

While many Americans question the content of some television shows, questions are also raised about how Shows’ bill might legally define violent behavior and immorality.

The U.S. Supreme Court has permitted individual communities to establish local standards for pornography, but because network television is broadcast coast to coast the issue of defining “immorality” becomes less clear.

The Shows bill would first require the FCC to look at how effective the V-chip and the TV rating system are in keeping violent programs off television, and the “safe harbor” provision would only take effect if it’s found those two systems are not working, CNSNews.com reported.

The legislation, if fully enacted, also would give the agency the authority to define the time frame for the safe harbor, and give it the enforcement muscle to revoke the broadcast license of stations that do not comply with the act.
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Hogenson is CNSNews.com’s executive editor. Used by permission.

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  • Scott Hogenson