Federal Authority for Audiovisual Communication Services


The Federal Authority for Audiovisual Communication Services was an agency of the government of Argentina with the power to regulate television and radio services. It began activities on December 10, 2009, two months after the passage of the Law 26,522 of Audiovisual Communications Services, and replaced the Federal Broadcasting Committee.
Its former director was Martín Sabbatella.

Composition

The AFSCA was led by a seven-member board, consisting of the following:
The first predecessor to AFSCA was CONART, the National Radio and Television Commission, which came into being in 1957 under the government of Pedro Eugenio Aramburu.

Federal Broadcasting Committee

The Federal Broadcasting Committee was formed with the National Telecommunications Law, passed in 1972 during the de facto presidency of Alejandro Agustín Lanusse.
When the National Broadcasting Law was passed in 1980 during the military government of Jorge Rafael Videla, COMFER retained its status as regulator. From 1980 until 2009, COMFER was run by various managers and directors, each of them named by the president. Law 22,285 specified a governing board consisting of representatives from the army, navy and air force, the secretaries of public information and communications, and representatives of the trade associations for radio and television.

AFSCA

AFSCA was formed in 2009 after the passage of Law 26,522. It had the power to award television licenses, regulate programming and sanction violators with fines.
On September 17, 2012, President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner tapped Martín Sabbatella, a former member of the Chamber of Deputies and one-time intendant of Morón, Buenos Aires, to head up the agency. Sabbatella took the post on October 1.
In December 2015, new president Mauricio Macri placed AFSCA under the direction of the Ministry of Communications and combined it with AFTIC, the Federal Authority for Information and Communications Technologies, as the Ente Nacional de Comunicaciones. The combined agency was initially run by Miguel De Godoy, former secretary for media in Buenos Aires.