Title 22 › Chapter 18— UNITED STATES INFORMATION AND EDUCATIONAL EXCHANGE PROGRAMS › Subchapter V— DISSEMINATION ABROAD OF INFORMATION ABOUT THE UNITED STATES › § 1464a
Allows the Broadcasting Board of Governors to buy or lease time on commercial or U.S. government satellites to send programs and materials to U.S. posts and other users overseas. Congress says TV is important for reaching people around the world, so the U.S. International Television Service must win viewers’ trust. Its news must be reliable, accurate, and fair. It must show a wide range of American ideas and institutions, not favor one group, and it must explain U.S. policies clearly while allowing responsible discussion of those policies. The Board may make, buy, or air satellite TV programs only if they are interactive interviews between different places; cover news, public affairs, or current events; show official government activities (including Congress and executive briefings); or present American arts, science, or culture. If a comparable U.S. public or commercial program is available at equal or lower cost, the Board must use that instead. Spending for the service is limited to $12,000,000 in fiscal year 1990 and $12,480,000 in fiscal year 1991. The Board must send Congress quarterly reports for those years explaining spending and why any in-house programs were made, including a statement that no cheaper comparable U.S. program existed. Also, $1,500,000 in each of fiscal years 1990 and 1991 may be used only to buy or use programs made with grants from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting or by U.S. public broadcasters.
Full Legal Text
Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
22 U.S.C. § 1464a
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60