
Prometheus Press Center
Prometheus De-Livered
Our Periodic Newsletter
9 November 2001 - part 2
This is a frustrating time of sitting tight for many groups that have
applied for stations, but as can be seen in the case of Lake County Radio,
excellent stations are being built and they are going on the air. Now
is a good time to study up on broadcasting, raise a little money, and
protest the plans of public officials to give the media moguls even more
control of the airwaves. We've talked to a number of groups who had sort
of given up after years of waiting, only to see the permit come in the
mailŠand then they started scrambling. We hope you can join us in Maryland
as we build our first legal station in February, and plan the next year
of Media Activism!
Contents
[Radio Barnraising Scheduled]
[Lake County Radio on the Air]
[Appendix B Status Screwed up By Congress]
[Fundraising Help]
[What's
New In LPFM]
[Corporations
Who Own Too Much]
[Something
Rotten in the State of California]
[Call for Computer Programmers and Wireless Explorers:
Research projects in streaming links and WIFI]
[Get Making Waves delivered right to you electronic
mail box -- register online]
Radio Barnraising conferences scheduled
Our first radio barnraising conference and master class in radio for
new LPFM radio stations and applicants is finally scheduled! It will be
Presidents Day Weekend, from February 15th to 18th, 2002 in South Arundel,
Maryland, just a half hour east of Washington DC. It will be sponsored
by SACRED, the South Arundel Citizens for Responsible Economic Development.
SACReD is a
great group that has just won a major victory in its campaign to stop
urban sprawl and protect the fragile ecosystem of the Chesapeake Bay.
They also run kids environmental programs on their classic Skipjack fishing
boat. This grassroots action group holds one of the first LPFM license
to be issued.
One of our favorite radio engineers will come to supervise a "Radio Barn
Raising," in which all the groups we've worked with come out and help
put one of these stations on the air. At the end of the weekend, we hope
to flip the switch and let one of the first LPFM signals fly!
It will be a time where new programmers will meet, new stations can compare
notes on fundraising and equipment, and broadcast professionals can share
their skills with the new low power radio stations. We'll also plan the
course for media activism for the next year, and plot for the continued
fight to take back the media from the greedy corporations.
Tentative workshops include:
- Radio production
- local news gathering
- internet radio
- filling out applications
- interference issues
- new technologies
- fundraising
- media and democracy campaigns
- the congressional fight and the courts
- studio building
- international broadcasting projects
- programming policy
- media literacy
- youth programs
- outreach for your new station- and of course
- the radio barnraising
- with tips on selecting equipment
- purchasing
- building a low power radio station from microphone to antenna!
To register, go to: http://prometheus.tao.ca/barn.shtml
or write to info@prometheusradio.org if you have
trouble with the form
Conference cost will be $20-$80/day sliding scale: meals and simple lodging
included.
Also, the Southern Development Foundation in Opelousas Louisiana has
gotten its permit! We hope to schedule a conference there sometime within
the next 6 months.
Who is putting in the largest number of Informal objections to Low power
FM applications? The NAB? NPR? Guess again, it is Prometheus, Microradio
Implementation Project, the National Lawyers Guild and Christian Community
Broadcasters! Some national church organizations appear to have put in
dozens of applications through their affiliates to turn Low Power Radio
into a Low Power Empire. Read more about it below in "Something Rotten
in California."
Our advice if you are in window 4/5, and are competing with other applicants:
take up fishing, or some other hobby. Put your application in the drawer
and forget about it for a while. Your radio station permit will come:
but worrying about it will do you no good. Don't rent a space right now.
If you already rented a space ( as quite a few have) use it for something
else for a while.
Do start low key fundraising activities, like bake sales and benefit
concerts. Try to raise a few hundred dollars a month and put it away.
There are about a hundred construction permits that are sitting unused
right now because people didn't raise money till they got the permit,
and now they are scrambling to find large amounts of money. Most grantmaking
institutions don't like to give out big grants until they have seen that
the organization is capable of doing small, volunteer intensive grassroots
fundraising.
Spend some time reading up on audio and radio- there are introductory
resources on our website, and more are coming. And start gathering audio
equipment and a good couple of computers.
One thing that has worked well for Radio Volta in Philadelphia has been
launching an internet radio station while waiting for our FCC license
to come through. This way, we set up the whole audio studio, and people
could get practice doing their shows before going FM. Some programmers
have actually picked up bigger internet audiences than they could have
dreamed of on FM. And one programmer, the Reverend Bookburn asked that
his show not go on FM when we got our permit, because his content (satirical
shows about subjects like the hypocrisy of the religious right) would
not pass the obscenity rules of the FCC for FM, but was very popular on
the internet.
Lake Country Radio On The Air
Marissa Johnson from Prometheus interviews Linda Guebert about one of
the first LPFM community radio stations to start broadcasting.
Q. Who are you and what do you do at Lake County Community Radio?
A. My name is Linda Guebert. I am a teacher of English as a Second language,
currently serving as Vice-President of LCCR. I also have a radio program
called "Denim Alley," which is mostly folk and country music.
Q. How did your group come together? Do you currently work with
any non-profit groups?
A. A group of interested community members came together about three years
ago to form a non-profit corporation in order to apply for a full-power
public radio station and to raise money for the initial engineering reports
which were needed to do that. We did not hear from the FCC regarding our
full-power application after several years, so we applied for a low-power
license when that became available. We do not partner formally with any
other non-profit groups, although we support each other. The Lakeport
Community Players recently did a benefit performance for LCCR.
Q. What would you say is Lake County Community Radio's mission?
A. To my knowledge, we have never formally passed a mission statement,
although it has come under discussion from time to time and a version
appears on our website www.kpfz.org.
following was part of our application for IRS charitable status: "The
primary purpose of Lake County Community Radio is to set up and operate
a public, non-commercial radio station which serves the educational and
cultural needs of the community in Lake County, California. Lake County
Community Radio will also provide instruction and opportunities for the
public to learn broadcasting skills, including audio production studio
skills. In addition, Lake County Community Radio will serve as an emergency
broadcast system for the county."
Q. What kind of programs do you have? Do you only have local programming?
Do you have plans for a news program?
A. Most of our programming is local. I suggest you go to the website and
look at the schedule posted there. (ed. note: Their website and their
programming listings are completely awesome and inspirational). Right
now we feature some Pacifica news programs and have several discussion
programs which deal with current affairs, but no local news program as
such.
Q. Are your studio and transmitter in the same location? If not,
what kind of studio to transmitter link do you have set up?
A. Right now they are in the same location.
Q. What kind of equipment are you using? (answer as much as you
like, we get a lot of gearheads asking questions...)
A. The equipment we are using right now is mostly donated or on loan.
We have just received a PTFP grant, so will be purchasing our own, higher-quality
equipment soon. At present we are using a Broadcast Warehouse TX-150 (from
England–this is new), a Comet antenna, a little 12-channel Mackie board
and home consumer electronics.
Q. How much money has your group spent so far? How have you funded
things so far?
A. We are operating on a shoestring right now. All of our funding (with
the exception of the PTFP grant, which has barely started) comes from
donations. We have had several fundraisers and have recently sent out
a direct mail appeal. At present there is resistance to the idea of underwriting.
Q. How has the communities response been to the station?
A. Generally good, although we are still getting the word out. The local
paper has helped to give publicity, but our limited hours on the air and
the fact that we don't cover the whole county have made it difficult for
people to find out about us. We think this will improve with time.
Q. What are Lake County Community Radio's plans for the future?
A. There is a good chance that we will receive the full-power construction
permit soon. If so, we will have to give up the low-power station, since
we are not allowed to own both. We are looking for a new studio site in
the county seat of Lakeport, which is more convenient for everyone; the
studio site would be the same no matter which license we had.
Appendix B: status of applications screwed up
by Congress
Appendix B means you applied for a frequency that would have been good
under the original FCC low power rules, but your frequency was taken away
by the dastardly act of Congress sponsored by the incumbent monopolists
at National Association of Broadcasters and National Public Radio However,
you should know that the reports of your demise are premature. There are
a few possibilities that may allow you to still go on the air. See our
website at http://www.prometheus.tao.ca/faq_appendixb.shtml
to walk you through your options.
Help with Fundraising from(and for) Prometheus
Prometheus wants to welcome our new fundraiser, Caroline Leopold, and
to let you know about our new guide to fundraising by our previous fundraiser
and current outreach coordinator, Marissa Johnson, that is on our website
at http://www.prometheus.tao.ca/bacfundraising.shtml
It has lots and los of ideas to get you started in raising the funds for
your radio station.
In the beginning, it was easy for us to just drop our jobs for a few
months and pass the hat for gas money as we went from town to town preaching
the gospel of free radio, passing the hat for gas money and sleeping on
our hosts couches. As the campaign got more and more bitter between us
and NPR and the NAB, we recognized that we couldn't
win without more resources, and we got our first grants from foundations.
Now, as the reality sets in that there are hundreds of stations to build
and there will be a round two in the fight for more frequencies for community
radio, we are building our organization for the long haul.
Caroline is finishing up our non-profit application, and is researching
sources of funding for Prometheus and low power radio stations in general.
Feel free to call her on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays and ask her
for her advice on fundraising for your station. Once she gets sustainable
funding for Prometheus in place, her main role will be to advise you on
fundraising for your stations. If you'd like to make a tax-deductible
contribution to our work, you can write checks to Media Alliance, which
is our fiscal sponsor. If you don't care about tax deductibility you can
make it out straight to Prometheus. You can send them to Prometheus Radio
Project, P.O. Box 42158, Philly PA 19101.
|