Engineering:Government-access television

In the United States, government-access television (GATV) is a type of specialty television channel created by government entities (generally local governments) and broadcast over cable TV systems or, in some cases, over-the-air broadcast television stations. GATV programming generally deals with public affairs, board meetings (i.e. municipal council, county commission, and school board), explanation of government services, and other public-service related programming such as public service announcements and longer public information films.
In the United States, laws regarding GATV are contained in the US Code, title 47, section 531,[1] and are enforced by the Federal Communications Commission. Since cable systems are privately owned entities (unlike broadcast television), the must-carry requirement for GATV channels is often drawn out in local franchising agreements for the municipality or county it operates in.
GATV is often associated with public-access television, such as with the term PEG channels.
Statewide government access channels
| U.S. state | Network |
|---|---|
| The California Channel | |
| Connecticut Network | |
| The Florida Channel | |
| Illinois Channel | |
| Michigan Government Television | |
| TVMT | |
| NY-SCAN (defunct) | |
| The Ohio Channel | |
| The Oregon Channel (defunct) | |
| Pennsylvania Cable Network | |
| TVW (Washington) | |
| WisconsinEye |
See also
- C-SPAN
- Public, educational, and government access (PEG)
References
Template:Federal Communications Commission
