For years, cable service provider Comcast has opted not to carry African-American owned channels on its nationwide platforms, and Stanley E. Washington has had enough.

Washington, president and CEO of the newly-formed National Coalition of African-American Owned Media, or NCAAOM, is calling for African-American families to disconnect their Comcast services immediately and boycott the company until it changes its policy.

Comcast generates about $3 billion per month and $36 billion per year from approximately 24 million cable subscribers. According to a press release issued by the coalition, in major cities with large Black populations, African-Americans contribute around $15 billion of Comcastโ€™s revenue.

The company carries 11 cable networks and On Demand programming that specifically target the African-American community. But while these channels are aimed at African-Americans, they arenโ€™t 100 percent Black-owned. Majority-owned African-American channels such as the Black Television News Channel and the Africa Channel are offered by Comcast in some areas, but not on its national platform.

Some African-American media leaders, however, donโ€™t share Washingtonโ€™s view on Comcast.

โ€œComcast has the best infrastructure of inclusion to build upon in the media industry,โ€ Will Griffin, chairman and chief executive officer of Hip Hop on Demand, wrote in testimony posted on the U.S. House Judiciary Committeeโ€™s Web site.

Frank Washington, chief executive officer of ethnic language television service TV Crossings, echoed Griffinโ€™s sentiments in his testimony, also posted on the Judiciary Committeeโ€™s Web site. โ€œComcast should be acknowledged for realizing the power and promise of this countryโ€™s ethnic communities,โ€ said Washington. โ€œNot every media company does.โ€

Comcast awaits FCC approval of its major merger with the much larger NBC/Universal company. Stanley Washington said he fears that the deal, if approved, would leave no room for the inception and broadcast of fully Black-owned channels.

โ€œWe just want African-American owners to be able to come to the table like everyone else,โ€ Washington told Blackvoicenews.com. โ€œWhen you really start thinking about the areas that are critically important to us African-Americans, one of the biggest issues is our ability to own, distribute and create our own image.โ€