Tag archive for "SFC Portland"

Blog, Issues, Where Are My Games?

Blazers Seek FCC Help Forcing Comcast To Keep Promise

No Comments 14 July 2010

This just in from SFC-Portland Chair Sarah Moon…

In February, SFC board member Brad Blakeman testified before the Oregon General Assembly against Comcast’s decision to withhold games from fans in Oregon more than 3 years after promising to provide them access.  Now, the Portland Trailblazers have taken the next step in requesting that the FCC force Comcast’s hand in providing broadcasts to the multitudes of Oregon-based fans who are unable to subscribe to Comcast.

Blazers_UpriseSign_2009

Let’s keep the pressure on Comcast to do right by Blazers fans and keep their promise to the people of Oregon.

Sign the petition to the Oregon General Assembly to give us our Blazers games.

Tell us your story.

Become a fan of SFC-Portland on Facebook.

Follow the Local Chapter on Twitter.

Blog, Issues, Stadiums

Just Do It. Ducks Bow to Nike Power.

5 Comments 05 June 2010

Just Do It. Ducks Bow to Nike Power.

by Sarah Moon

UniversityofOregonProposedAthleticFacility

On Friday, the Oregon State Board of Education on Friday approved Nike and University of Oregon’s proposal to build a huge 80,000-square foot complex for the football team. Because the project will be built under the auspices of a private corporation, the Nike subsidiary of the UO foundation, Phit LLC, the project will not be subject to the state’s “Sunshine Laws” regulating public disclosure of costs and contracts nor will it be put out to competitive bidding, as is normally required for facilities built on public lands. However, tax payers remain responsible for maintenance and staffing of the new football facility, the costs of which could be enormous.

Phil-Knight-Celebrates-Rose-BowlApproval was rushed through the State Board, with only six of the 12-member board voting on the project. UO president Richard Lariviere warned the board that unless the project received approval including all of Knight’s terms and conditions requiring no-bid contracts and zero public disclosure on Friday (after only discussing it for the first time that day), the project would be off the table and future donations to the college were at risk, “If we don’t accept this gift, what will be the negative consequences for the university’s education and research mission? Probably not much — immediately, in the short-term. But they could be really, really profound over the longer term. Really profound.”   

This is not the first project at the University of Oregon that Phil Knight and Nike have insisted be built with no public oversight or disclosure. At least two other project at the school have been financed and built in this way, under the direction and funding of Phit with UO and the State of Oregon being responsible for maintenance and staffing of the new facilities. The relationship between Knight and the University of Oregon is unprecedented for public colleges and universities—even projects funded with T. Boone Pickens’ $300 million in contributions to Oklahoma State University were conducted under that state’s guidelines for contracting and open records laws. In Oregon, however, we simply have no idea what the long-term costs of Knight’s generosity are to the state, because of the Nike founder’s insistence on secrecy.

While Knight has certainly ensured his legacy to University of Oregon, we Oregonians must ask what Knight’s legacy will cost us.

Sarah Moon is SFC-Portland’s Local Chapter Chair

Visit the SFC Portland page here.

Become a fan of SFC-Portland on Facebook.

Follow the Local Chapter on Twitter.

Blog, Issues, Stadiums

Nike Proposes New Athletic Building, Tax-Payers Cringe

No Comments 04 June 2010

According to the Oregonion, Nike and the University of Oregon are bypassing Sunshine Laws to build a football stadium that the public will be on the hook to staff and maintain. The tax-paying public doesn’t get the benefit of viewing the financials which directly affect their bottom line.

Phil Knight, Nike’s founder, wants to live by his own rules and privately construct this athletic facility of his own design assuming the local political powers that be allow him carte blanche all the way up to cutting the rope and claiming mission accomplished. What appears on the outside to be a huge philanthropic endeavor presents deeper issues for tax paying sports fans in Oregon.

SFC-Portland Local Chapter Chair Sarah Moon contributed to this article.

Visit the SFC Portland page here.

Become a fan of SFC-Portland on Facebook.

Follow the Local Chapter on Twitter.

Blog, Issues, Where Are My Games?

Monday’s Call to Action by Brad Blakeman

1 Comment 01 March 2010

blakeman_bradleyI traveled last week to Salem, Oregon to testify before Members of the Oregon General Assembly with regard to Comcast Cable’s blacking out of Portland Trail Blazers home games. Thousands of Trail Blazers fans are denied enjoying their favorite past time because of the greed and control exercised by a cable provider who refuses to provide the feed for home games to competitors in areas they cannot and do not service.

SFC struck a nerve in Oregon and challenged lawmakers and fans to take on Comcast, the Trail Blazers, and  satellite providers to “do the right thing” by fans. There is no good reason why tens of thousands of sports fans are unable to enjoy Trail Blazers home games in the comfort of their homes, their favorite restaurant or bar.

Now it is up to the fans to get off the bench and take to the court and take on this issue, head on. There is no doubt that fans can make a difference and SFC is there to help.

Sign the petition directing Oregon State representatives to take on this issue.

Become a fan of the Local Chapter in Oregon, SFC-Portland, on Facebook.

Follow SFC-Portland on Twitter.

Blog, Issues, Where Are My Games?

SFC Board Member Brad Blakeman’s Testimony Before Oregon General Assembly

2 Comments 24 February 2010

Testimony of Brad Blakeman

Sports Fans Coalition

before the

Oregon State House Committee on
Consumer Protection and Government Accountability

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

 

Chairman Holvey, Vice-Chairman Gilliam, Vice-Chairman Riley, Members of the Consumer Protection and Government Accountability Committee: 

 

The question that brings me before you is a simple one:  should Oregon sports fans be able to watch on TV their home town team play home games in the comfort of their homes or at their favorite restaurant or bar?  When the taxpayers of Oregon help to make sports here a reality, the answer is clearly, yes they should!   

 

My name is Brad Blakeman and I am a member of the Sports Fans Coalition Board of Directors.  Like a lot of Oregonians, I am an avid sports fan.  I also have lived and breathed politics and public policy for decades, serving on the senior White House staff for President George W. Bush and, today, teaching political science at Georgetown University.  I also am a regular political contributor to Fox News, MSNBC, and other television networks.

 

Sports Fans Coalition is a non-profit advocacy group with a single mission:  to give the sports fan a seat at the table whenever public policy impacting sports is being made.  We have a bi-partisan board of directors.  In addition to myself, a Republican from the Bush White House, our Chairman, David Goodfriend, is a Democrat and former Clinton White House staffer.  Our board also includes a sports writer, a public interest advocate, and a former CEO.  Our members are sports fans from around the United States.  But we all have one thing in common:  we love sports and think that fans should be better represented before the government.

 

We are proud to announce that just this week, Sarah Moon of Portland became the Chair of Sports Fans Coalition’s new Portland, Oregon chapter.  Sarah is a die-hard Trail Blazers fan, season-ticket holder, and all-around Oregon sports fan.

 

Here in Oregon, Portland Trail Blazers fans have been shut out from watching their own games.  In 2007, the Trail Blazers apparently entered into a ten-year deal with Comcast, worth about $120 million, to carry Trail Blazers games on Comcast SportsNet.  At the time, fans in Oregon were told that they eventually would be able to view their home games regardless of who provided their TV. 

 

Oregon sports fans rightfully expected to be able to watch their Trail Blazers playing home games in Portland.  After all, the fans helped pay for the arena.  Press accounts state that the City of Portland contributed $34.5 million to help build the Rose Garden. 

 

Today, however, almost three years after the Comcast/Blazers deal, only Comcast cable subscribers and a few subscribers to small cable systems can watch every game the Blazers play at home.  This year, for example, of the over 80 home games, 60 will be available only to Comcast and a few other subscribers via Comcast Sports Net.

 

So, if you live in a neighborhood that is served by Charter cable, you cannot watch your Trail Blazers playing a home game.  If you live in a rural area where the only pay-TV providers are DISH Network or DIRECTV, you cannot watch your Trail Blazers playing a home game. 

 

Even the mother of Sarah Moon, our Oregon chapter chair, is impacted:  a huge Trail Blazers fan, she lives in a rural area south of Portland.  She does not have access to Comcast, which means she has zero access to Blazers games.  As you can imagine, this is extremely disappointing for her.

 

Oregon sports fans, you deserve better.

 

Now, it just so happens that Comcast wants something from you at the moment.

 

On January 28, 2010, Comcast, GE, and NBC-Universal filed papers in Washington, D.C. asking the government to approve Comcast acquiring NBC-Universal. 

 

The federal government is not the only one who can weigh in on this transaction, however.  The State of Oregon, through the office of the Attorney General, can weigh in on the proposed merger under Oregon anti-trust laws.  Oregon could even move to block the deal.

 

In other words, Oregon, Comcast right now is asking you for permission to acquire NBC-Universal.

 

Sports Fans Coalition would like to pose a simple question:  if Comcast is asking the Oregon state government and the federal government for permission to acquire NBC-Universal, why can’t Trail Blazers fans in Oregon ask to see their home games first?

 

Comcast might make a number of arguments against us even posing this question.  For example, they might say that theirs is a private contract negotiated between Comcast and the Trail Blazers. 

 

True, and no one wants to interfere with that contract, especially not a free-market conservative Republican like me.  But right now, Comcast is asking the people of Oregon for something it wants—approval of its merger.  Oregonians have every right to ask Comcast for something they want in return, especially when Comcast apparently promised it to them almost three years ago.

 

Comcast also has been known to bring up DIRECTV’s NFL Sunday Ticket as an example of a sports exclusive that somehow justifies Comcast’s behavior in Oregon and elsewhere.

 

Not so.  In Oregon, local fans are not able to watch, from the comfort of their own home, their home-town team playing home games.  Sunday Ticket is for out-of-market games.  It has nothing to do with watching your home town team playing home games.  Sports  Fans Coalition believes that local fans should be able to watch their local team play its home games, regardless of how a fan gets his or her TV.

 

Finally, let me just point out that there are people who think that sports issues are too frivolous for legislatures to take up.  Sports Fans Coalition disagrees.  The government already is heavily involved in sports.  As I mentioned, government funds were used to build the Rose Garden here in Oregon.  Federal statutes include sweeping exemptions for professional sports leagues.  Clearly, legislatures and governments historically have found sports to be fair game.

 

It is about time that fans get off the bench and take the field to fight for their rights to enjoy America’s favorite pastimes, whether in their homes or at their local stadiums.  When issues have an impact on fans, the fans should be heard.

 

Also, let’s face it.  The sports media economy is one of the largest of all private industry sectors.  It is larger than the U.S. automobile industry.  Sports represents tens of billions of dollars annually to the U.S. economy. 

 

Americans these days want to see their government, at the local, state, and federal levels, give them their money’s worth.  If taxpayer dollars and public laws go into sustaining the sports economy –which they do—then fans and citizens have every right to make their wishes known to their elected officials, and to expect results.

Thank you for the opportunity to testify before you today.

Blog, Issues, Where Are My Games?

SFC to Testify Against Comcast in Oregon, SFC Launches Portland Chapter

1 Comment 24 February 2010

Blazers_UpriseSign_2009FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

 

 

 

State of Oregon Seeks Remedy to Trail Blazers TV Contract

SFC Testifies Against Comcast in Oregon General Assembly

SFC Launches First Local Chapter in Portland, Oregon

Washington, D.C. — At the request of the Oregon State Legislature, Sports Fans Coalition sends board member Brad Blakeman to testify in the Oregon State House Committee on Consumer Protection and Government Accountability concerning Comcast’s egregious practice of shutting out Portland Trail Blazers fans from the ability to watch their home games on TV. While Comcast seeks permission to merge with NBC Universal, Blakeman asks, ‘Why can’t Trail Blazers fans in Oregon ask to see their home games first?’

At the outset of the ten-year contract struck between Comcast and the Portland Trail Blazers, Comcast promised Oregon sports fans that they would eventually get to view their home games regardless of who provided their TV.  “Almost three years after the Comcast/Blazers deal,” Blakeman notes, “only Comcast cable subscribers and a few subscribers to small cable systems can watch every game the Blazers play at home.”

To more adequately address the issues that face sports fans in Oregon, Sports Fans Coalition launches the first Local Chapter today based in Portland.  The Chair of SFC Portland, Sarah Moon, shares the experience of many Trail Blazers fans with friends and family currently shut out of Blazers’ broadcasts much to their discontent.  SFC Portland will serve as a home for sports fans to share their frustrations and as a voice for the local community seeking to organize consumers to speak up and demand results from government and industry.

If a media giant like Comcast acts in such a way as to provoke an entire state of sports fans today with such disingenuous behavior, it is evident that preconditions should be applied to the company’s bid to acquire NBC Universal before real consideration is given to approval of the merger.  “Oregon sports fans,” Blakeman continues, “you deserve better.”

The Sports Fans Coalition’s agenda advocates that sports fans should be able to watch their local teams play, regardless of how fans get their games.  There should be no local sports exclusives.  Now that the FCC has voted in favor of the sports fan, the Sports Fans Coalition will be acutely focused on the execution of the ruling in Oregon as well as in every state across the country.

On February 19th, Sports Fans Coalition joined a group of twelve industry associations, labor organizations, and public interest groups in creating and sending a letter urging Comcast President and CEO Brian Roberts to drop litigation seeking to overturn the FCC’s decision to ensure that programming owned by cable operators is shared with competing cable and satellite TV providers so that sports fans are not left out in the cold asking ‘Where are my games?’

Read the letter here.

Sign the petition here.

View the SFC Portland page here.

Become a fan of SFC Portland on Facebook.

Follow SFC Portland on Twitter.

Start an SFC Local Chapter in your town.





About SFC

SFC is the American sports fan’s advocate in the D.C. public policy arena fighting for sports fans in every city across the country.

Sports Businesses, Leagues, and Universities are grasping for our cash left and right. Let's join together to keep their hands off our wallets unless and until we have a say in how that money is spent. Futhermore, we sports fans believe we should be able to watch our games, no matter how we get our media.

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