honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 1:49 p.m., Thursday, January 15, 2009

Hawaii takes digital TV plunge ... with a few glitches

By MARK NIESSE
Associated Press

Hawai'i residents lit up special TV help center phone lines as the state shut down all analog broadcast signals today at noon, more than a month before the rest of the country.

Officials at a Federal Communications Commission call center made last-minute checks with some 20 TV stations around the islands with all reporting they were ready to start the now-contentious national switch to digital.

"The calls we're getting now are from those poople who are waking up and saying, 'Oh, my God, what do I do?" said Lyle Ishida, the FCC's Hawaii digital TV project manager, just before the switch.

Experts taking the calls were quickly screening out anyone with cable or satellite service, because they are unaffected by the switch. But some confusion had been expected.

"No matter how many commercials we run, there will always be a certain part of the population that doesn't get the message," said Chris Leonard, president of the Hawaii Association of Broadcasters, who was helping out at the call center.

One glitch cropped up even before the switch, with the PBS station on the Big Island reporting it hadn't yet received equipment to send its digital signal south of Hilo to the southernmost point in the nation, South Point. PBS has been the only station serving the rural area. The problem was expected to last for several days.

With analog TV signals turned off, residents with older TVs were finding out whether they would be missing any channels or whether they still have any service at all.

Government officials and broadcasters estimate about 20,000 households in Hawaii still get their TV signals over the air, meaning they'd have to buy new TVs with digital tuners or digital converter boxes for their old TVs.

Households that need but failed to buy digital converter boxes would miss Thursday night shows like "CSI" or "Grey's Anatomy." Others who bought the $50 to $70 converter boxes might still find they lost channels because digital signals won't necessarily reach all the places hit by analog broadcasts.

Hawai'i was moving to all-digital TV before the Feb. 17 date set for the rest of the nation because of an endangered bird, the Hawaiian dark-rumped petrel. Broadcasters and park rangers want to take down analog transmission towers on the slopes of Maui's Haleakala volcano before the bird's nesting season.

The analog shutdown in the rest of the country — which Congress mandated to free up space in the airwaves for other wireless services — has been put in doubt because the federal government has run out of money for $40 coupons to subsidize converter boxes. President-elect Barack Obama's transition team has asked Congress for a delay.

Despite extensive preparations and a broad public educational effort, the government and broadcasters are prepared for a torrent of complaints when analog TV dies.

In Hawaii, hundreds of calls for help already have been pouring in daily to the statewide customer support center. Some TV stations have put messages on their phone answering systems referring callers first to the support center.

Teams of volunteers and contractors have been making house calls to residents who were having difficulties with the converter boxes, but they may not be able to reach everyone throughout the Islands today if there are widespread problems, especially in rural areas.