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Annual Reports

MAP Brochure (pdf)

2002 Annual Report (pdf)

2004 Annual Report (pdf)

2005 Annual Report (pdf)

About MAP

Media Access Project (MAP) is a non-profit advocacy organization dedicated to promoting the public’s First Amendment right to access a diverse marketplace of ideas in the electronic mass media of today and tomorrow. For over 35 years, MAP has promoted the public interest before the FCC and the Courts, advocating for an open and diverse media that protects the free flow of information, promotes universal and equitable access, and encourages vibrant public discourse on critical issues facing our society. In the words of the Supreme Court:

“It is the purpose of the First Amendment to preserve an uninhibited marketplace of ideas in which truth will ultimately prevail, rather than to countenance monopolization of that market, whether it be by the Government itself or a private licensee…”

MAP is the only Washington-based organization devoted to representing listeners’ and speakers’ interests in electronic media and telecommunications issues before the Federal Communications Commission, other policy-making bodies, and in the courts. MAP’s staff attorneys provide guidance and representation to scores of national and local non-profit groups annually. They appear frequently at academic, legislative, and professional meetings to ensure that the needs of the public are not forgotten as policies are established for the next generation.

MAP grew out of the movement that began with the landmark United Church of Christ litigation of the 1960s. Those cases, involving the failure of a Mississippi TV station to serve the African American community, established that members of the viewing and listening public have the legal right, derived from the First Amendment, to participate in FCC proceedings.

In 1972, lawyers concerned with promoting public accountability and social justice in the media formed the Media Access Project to advance the rights of the public to participate in the democratic process. In its early days, MAP’s work implementing the FCC’s fairness doctrine helped open TV networks to anti-war and civil rights activists.

MAP Today

According to the National Journal, MAP is “considered by some … dollar-for-dollar the best-run public interest group in Washington.”

MAP occupies a unique role as a Washington thought leader in telecommunications and technology policy. From leading efforts to convince the FCC to create the Low Power FM service to being among the first to advocate for open access and network neutrality, MAP provides critical policy leadership and council to the public interest and media reform community. As new media and communication platforms have developed, MAP has fought to assure the public’s right to access is institutionalized and protected.

MAP is at the forefront of efforts to develop media policies which will, quite literally, govern the terms of voter participation and public discourse in the next generation. MAP works to ensure that current and future media and telecommunications technologies promote, and do not impede, democratic values.