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Cable service companies provide “PEG cable access”
channels to a community as compensation for using public rights-of-way
(roads, alleys, sidewalks, etc.) to string transmission lines
over, under or across. There are 3 types of “PEG”
access channels; Public (P), Educational (E), and Government
(G).
Y-PAC (Yakima Public Affairs Channel) is Yakima’s “government
access” channel.
Y-PAC was founded in 1993 as a ‘window into government.’
Y-PAC is similar in many ways to C-SPAN channels which air
sessions of the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S.
Senate as well as other public affairs events. Y-PAC airs
city council meetings (Yakima, Selah & Union Gap), speeches
by notable people, interviews with elected officials, local
issues panel discussions and many other public affairs events.
Y-PAC programming is unique in that it is “gavel-to-gavel”
coverage. Viewers can watch an entire city council meeting,
an entire speech or an entire interview from start to finish.
Y-PAC adheres to a strict no-editing policy. The principle
behind the no-editing policy is that Y-PAC viewers can, in
effect, attend a city council meeting, listen to a notable
speaker or be part of an important public forum without actually
having to be present. Y-PAC puts viewers “in the room”
so that viewers themselves can interpret a speaker’s
message, a forum’s focus or an elected official’s
comments.
In 2000, Y-PAC began airing programming on its own channel,
Charter Cable channel 22. Prior to that, Y-PAC shared a channel
with YCTV (Yakima Community Television, Charter Cable channel
9). YCTV, Y-PAC’s sister channel, is Yakima’s
“public access” channel and was founded in 1983.
Y-PAC is operated by the City of Yakima’s Telecommunications
Division and is an important element of the City’s ongoing
effort to improve communications among and between local government
and the general public. No tax dollars are used to provide
Y-PAC services. Y-PAC is provided as a public service by Yakima’s
cable TV operator, Charter Communications, and is funded by
a “franchise fee” paid to the City by Charter.
The “franchise fee” is another form of compensation,
similar to rent or lease payments, paid by Charter for use
of local public rights-of-way.
Since its founding a decade ago, Y-PAC has become a trusted
source of important information. Whether it’s a public
hearing on stormwater regulations, a forum about land use
issues or Y-PAC’s signature live, continuous election
night coverage, viewers know that Y-PAC programming is un-biased
and un-edited. Y-PAC is, “The Yakima Valley’s
Channel of Record.”
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