representatives or members of local communities served by broadcasters had been unable to access the arequirne at the be outweighing the costs. in fact the evidence before the commission indicates that the proposed new rules could cost the tv industry $15 million to up front expenses to upload existing paper files to a new government website while also forcing each station to incur upwards of $140,000 per year in recurring costs to maintain the information in realtime, as the fcc has proposed. before going further policymakers should be thoughtful and deliberative when examining the implications that could arise from the rules. i still see many unanswered questions. for instance, number one, if the public policy goal of new rules is to produce more transparency and campaign spending, is the fcc the best agency to achieve such ends rather than a federal election commission? number two, would fcc requirements that are duplicative to fec rules violate the paperwork reduction act? and number three, among many others and there are more in my written testimony, where are the em kuwaiting in singling