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WBFO Has Imploded

I am still in shock that WBFO did no storm coverage and just ran the NPR feed.

Alan Pergament had the story that blamed a water pipe breaking.

That seems an untruthful excuse from the station.

Today, one can broadcast from anywhere. You just need a microphone and a transmitter. The transmitter was on the air, so I would suggest a lazy staff and really bad leadership.

WBEN on the other hand, had excellent coverage around the clock for the whole storm.

Buffalo/Toronto Public Media has really gone downhill in the past few months, I’m sorry to say.
 
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I am still in shock that WBFO did no storm coverage and just ran the NPR feed.

Alan Pergament had a story that blamed a water pipe breaking.

Here's a link to Alan's story:


I'm sure it didn't help that the storm hit during a holiday weekend. Speaking for myself, I had the day off for Christmas eve. I listened a bit to WBFO during the storm last month, and they had a lot of local coverage during the day. So I don't think you can draw any conclusions from this one example.
 
I am still in shock that WBFO did no storm coverage and just ran the NPR feed.

Alan Pergament had a story that blamed a water pipe breaking.

That seems an untruthful excuse from the station.
  • Lay the person down and elevate the legs and feet slightly, unless you think this may cause pain or further injury.
  • Keep the person still and don't move him or her unless necessary.
I hope someone near you sees these instructions and gets to you quickly!
 
Here's a link to Alan's story:


I'm sure it didn't help that the storm hit during a holiday weekend. Speaking for myself, I had the day off for Christmas eve. I listened a bit to WBFO during the storm last month, and they had a lot of local coverage during the day. So I don't think you can draw any conclusions from this one example.
This is not about the storm last month. This is about this storm that just ended!

This “one example” is the very reason they are on the air.

More than 40 people died and the station didn’t do anything for days. That’s all one needs to know.

WBEN was in live coverage 24 hours throughout the storm.

If you are a responsible radio station, you don’t excuse it because it’s someone’s day off.

WBFO has a staff and didn’t plug a microphone into a transmitter. There is no excuse.

You had the day off? I’m not sure what your job is, so speaking for yourself might not apply to a news station. They blew it when people needed them most. That’s hard to recover from. It is merely a feed for NPR if you don’t cover the second biggest story of the year.

If a doctor sees a person having a heart attack on the street, does he try to help the person or does he say he won’t because it’s his day off?

It’s a lax attitude like this that is the reason for radio’s decline.
 
Today, one can broadcast from anywhere. You just need a microphone and a transmitter. The transmitter was on the air, so I would suggest a lazy staff and really bad leadership.
Without a doubt. Managers blaming "force majeure" is a sure sign that they are wimps.
 
  • Lay the person down and elevate the legs and feet slightly, unless you think this may cause pain or further injury.
  • Keep the person still and don't move him or her unless necessary.
I hope someone near you sees these instructions and gets to you quickly!
??
 
WBFO has a staff and didn’t plug a microphone into a transmitter. There is no excuse.
It is a lot more complicated than that. Unless you can get remote access to the transmitter and have remote audio gear of some kind, you can’t just take over the station...

And even if someone could access the transmitter, who is going to provide information unless a whole system is set up in advance.
 
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I am still in shock that WBFO did no storm coverage and just ran the NPR feed.

Alan Pergament had the story that blamed a water pipe breaking.

That seems an untruthful excuse from the station.

Today, one can broadcast from anywhere. You just need a microphone and a transmitter. The transmitter was on the air, so I would suggest a lazy staff and really bad leadership.

WBEN on the other hand, had excellent coverage around the clock for the whole storm.

Buffalo/Toronto Public Media has really gone downhill in the past few months, I’m sorry to say.

May I interject here? Is everyone overlooking the fact that this is an NPR station? Public broadcasting. Because they are affiliated with educational programming, doesn't it stand to reason that MAYBE they are scheduled like educators? Universities have been on winter break for a few weeks now. Doesn't it stand to reason that since the universities are shut down, that the radio station staff might be scheduled for only a few key individuals to maintain operations, and that others take an opportunity to visit family in other parts of the country? Also, being public broadcasting employees, their salaries are likely lower than the private sector, so some scheduled time off may be a perk in return for working for a lower salary.

You also bring up WBEN. That's Audacy. A PRIVATE company. More staff, better compensation (in all likelihood), and more resources to have staff scheduled during a holiday period that they observe over 1 week, instead of 3 to 4 weeks like schools. Sure, WBFO may not have provided as much local coverage as you would have liked. Guess what? Most NPR stations are in the same boat. They rely on underwriting. WBEN has sponsors. This is like apples to oranges. Before you start bashing NPR stations, look at your checkbook and tell me the last time you donated to keep them broadcasting.
 
This is not about the storm last month. This is about this storm that just ended!

You said the station has "gone downhill in the past few months." Doesn't that include the storm last month?

If you are a responsible radio station, you don’t excuse it because it’s someone’s day off.

First of all, no one at the station has said that it was anyone's day off. But I work in radio, and I was off that day. It was a paid holiday. People who work in radio have the same rights as everyone else. Giving up my Christmas eve was not going to save any lives, so let's be honest. People should not go out during a forecast blizzard. That's the best thing a radio station can say during a storm.
If a doctor sees a person having a heart attack on the street, does he try to help the person or does he say he won’t because it’s his day off?

That's a false comparison. But I can tell you my doctor was off on Christmas Eve.
It’s a lax attitude like this that is the reason for radio’s decline.

That's a stupid thing to say. People in Buffalo have WBEN. It's not like every radio station in Buffalo ignored the storm. All you need is one station. How many stations do you need telling people to stay inside during a blizzard?
 
I won't judge WBFO becaudse we dont know what was wrong or why they didn't do something. I can tell you first hand, when something like this happens or.. rather doesnt happen, there's something going on we arent aware of.

THAT BEING SAID.. even without remote voicetracking software and just basic remote access to automation, there are some very rudimentary ways to get information on the air......... record in adobe audition, email it to yourself.... log in to your email on a station computer, download the file , throw it into the automation folder... and then drag and drop it into automation. I've done that a few times at stations
 
May I interject here? Is everyone overlooking the fact that this is an NPR station? Public broadcasting. Because they are affiliated with educational programming, doesn't it stand to reason that MAYBE they are scheduled like educators? Universities have been on winter break for a few weeks now. Doesn't it stand to reason that since the universities are shut down, that the radio station staff might be scheduled for only a few key individuals to maintain operations, and that others take an opportunity to visit family in other parts of the country? Also, being public broadcasting employees, their salaries are likely lower than the private sector, so some scheduled time off may be a perk in return for working for a lower salary.

You also bring up WBEN. That's Audacy. A PRIVATE company. More staff, better compensation (in all likelihood), and more resources to have staff scheduled during a holiday period that they observe over 1 week, instead of 3 to 4 weeks like schools. Sure, WBFO may not have provided as much local coverage as you would have liked. Guess what? Most NPR stations are in the same boat. They rely on underwriting. WBEN has sponsors. This is like apples to oranges. Before you start bashing NPR stations, look at your checkbook and tell me the last time you donated to keep them broadcasting.

ACtually, no.... compensation is more often than not better in public radio than commercial radio.

I dont buy or believe in the "scheduled like educators".. they have no connectin to an educational institution.

I manage an NPR station... i was on the air 3 times one night between 9pm and 11pm then the next day, twice an hour between 6am and 3pm when the town flooded.
 
May I interject here? Is everyone overlooking the fact that this is an NPR station? Public broadcasting. Because they are affiliated with educational programming, doesn't it stand to reason that MAYBE they are scheduled like educators? Universities have been on winter break for a few weeks now. Doesn't it stand to reason that since the universities are shut down, that the radio station staff might be scheduled for only a few key individuals to maintain operations, and that others take an opportunity to visit family in other parts of the country? Also, being public broadcasting employees, their salaries are likely lower than the private sector, so some scheduled time off may be a perk in return for working for a lower salary.

You also bring up WBEN. That's Audacy. A PRIVATE company. More staff, better compensation (in all likelihood), and more resources to have staff scheduled during a holiday period that they observe over 1 week, instead of 3 to 4 weeks like schools. Sure, WBFO may not have provided as much local coverage as you would have liked. Guess what? Most NPR stations are in the same boat. They rely on underwriting. WBEN has sponsors. This is like apples to oranges. Before you start bashing NPR stations, look at your checkbook and tell me the last time you donated to keep them broadcasting.
With all due respect, please know that many of your statements here are simply not valid. First of all, WBFO is no longer affiliated with a university. So, the university calendar as you outline does not apply here. Secondly, even when WBFO was owned by the University at Buffalo, we did not follow an academic calendar. We were a 24/7 operation, including holidays. Plus, our salaries were higher than all but the highest-priced personalities in commercial radio. Our contracts were negotiated by United University Professions in Albany. I can personally attest that I was well compensated. And I had permanent appointment. Who can say that in radio? I do know that the reporting staff I had was paid more than their commercial radio counterparts.

I am loathe to criticize current BTPM management publicly. I am not privy to the coverage decisions that were made. All I can say that when I was in charge of the WBFO newsroom, I felt an obligation to be available 24/7, 365 days a year, including holidays. In 2001, I came in on Christmas morning to update listeners about the two feet of snow that fell in Buffalo on Christmas Eve. I filed with NPR. I even trudged, dragging a ladder, to the satellite dish to scrape the snow out so our signal from NPR wouldn’t drop out. Wasn’t in my job description. I didn’t get any extra pay. I did what I did because it was ingrained in me that we had to be there for listeners.

And David Eduardo, this doesn’t require a big investment of personnel and planning. One person is all that is needed. Again, before my retirement, I was able to record the latest weather and news information at home and upload it to the automation. This was 12 years ago. Technology has advanced since then. I would think it would be easier than ever.
 
And David Eduardo, this doesn’t require a big investment of personnel and planning. One person is all that is needed.
I don't disagree. But planning has to be done in advance of an emergency, both technically and logistically so that when the need occurs, the staff knows what to do and equipment is installed, regularly tested, and ready to operate in emergency mode.
Again, before my retirement, I was able to record the latest weather and news information at home and upload it to the automation. This was 12 years ago. Technology has advanced since then. I would think it would be easier than ever.
But the system has to be in place and staff trained to use it.

What I wonder is, first, whether the station was set up with current technology to do this sort of thing with today's equipment and whether available people were trained and equipped to react appropriately and rapidly.
 
You also bring up WBEN. That's Audacy. A PRIVATE company. More staff, better compensation (in all likelihood), and more resources to have staff scheduled during a holiday period that they observe over 1 week, instead of 3 to 4 weeks like schools.
I would be stunned if WBEN has more dedicated newsroom staff than WBFO. WBEN probably has more staff when you account for producers, talk show hosts, sellers, etc. Those staff can help with spot news, even if it is just contributing reports of conditions at their homes.

This is a good time to point out Aaron Reed's very handy playbook for redundancy, as he has implemented at Rhode Island Public Radio.
The Department of Redundancy Department
 
I’m the past, stations would have emergency response plans. Is this practice still common today?

As mentioned earlier, it seems like WBFO could have made at least a halfhearted attempt to update their listeners. They could schedule recorded updates during program breaks or publish timely updates on their homepage and directing listeners there for the latest info. All that’s required is a computer and working internet connection.

WBFO may have valid reasons for dropping the ball, but this will not go down in history as their proudest moment.
 
I don't disagree. But planning has to be done in advance of an emergency, both technically and logistically so that when the need occurs, the staff knows what to do and equipment is installed, regularly tested, and ready to operate in emergency mode.

But the system has to be in place and staff trained to use it.

What I wonder is, first, whether the station was set up with current technology to do this sort of thing with today's equipment and whether available people were trained and equipped to react appropriately and rapidly.
It’s possible that you are answering your own questions as to why this was an epic failure?

1. Of course, planning must take place beforehand, INDEED. Everyone knew a storm of massive proportions was arriving several days before it happened. Not a soul could do this? They likely have a bigger staff than WBEN.

2. I don’t know of any news station that doesn’t have the ability to broadcast from anywhere. It’s 2022. This has been the case for many years. I’m aware of a station in Buffalo that even provides live programming for a station in the Florida Keys. 680 News reporters and anchors in Toronto can take to the air in Montreal or Vancouver if need be.

3. WBFO has state of the art equipment. Their reporters send back audio all the time. Even all the religious stations are fed from elsewhere. We have a broadcaster in Guelph that does live customized updates and cut ins for their company on several stations in Ontario. As well, there are religious stations in tiny towns that broadcast to and from Buffalo every day. If they can’t feed their transmitter from elsewhere, that’s an engineering failure.

4. If the staff wasn’t trained on the equipment, that is a fail, as well. Why weren’t they trained if that were the case?

5. If their previous news director who commented here and her/his staff could do this sort of thing from their homes 12 years ago, of course they could do it now.

6. As far as “We only need one station,” WBEN, to broadcast is concerned, 90% of listening is done on FM. How much of a share does WBEN have of just that piddly 10% of the listeners? If the transmitter didn’t work, they have other options, such as continuing to broadcast on line or putting their vital programming on one of their FM stations. They put the WGR Sabres game on WBEN when there was a Bills conflict.

7. If # 6 were true, then why do listeners support WBFO, and I assume there is at least some public funding for public radio in the States? Do they do this solely for NPR?

8. I assume those who look for reasons to excuse such an epic failure, think of radio as an automated music service. A local news station is not at all the same as a voice-tracked playlist. So, if that’s the case, who needs radio? Satellite and Spotify are way better because they don’t run 20 minutes of commercials.

9. I also assume those who don’t think it’s a big deal, never worked for a radio or TV news organization. When you work at one, it goes without saying, you are basically like a first responder when a disaster happens. This is a job for journalists, not DJs. Perhaps people with a radio news background could chime in?

10. How did WBEN get their staff to work and broadcast? Somehow they did.

11. Has WBFO even made a statement on why they didn’t cover this story of life and limb?

12. This also isn’t about putting any reporters in harm’s way. You can gather information and make calls and put things together from the safety and comfort of your own home. You have internet, as well. You don’t have to stand in a snowbank with a whiteout and 100 kph winds to provide vital information for the community.

Someone decided a storm that killed 40 people wasn’t important. And if some catastrophe struck where they couldn’t get a feed, did they not have a strategic alliance in place with a TV station to run audio minus commercials or the Buffalo News to partner? CBC and NPR stations in cities across our countries do. I was in Northern California during the fires and the NPR station was running the audio from a commercial TV station that was providing commercial-free coverage. Presumably the NPR station studios had burned.

Why hasn’t WBFO made a statement saying what happened? No one was reachable for comment nor returned calls! Others, unrelated to the station have said there was a pipe that gave out elsewhere in the building. That is not an excuse for a station that had no trouble being on the air. And reporters are most certainly equipped to report or they wouldn’t be reporters. No one would have to leave their home.

Who is their news director now? What did she or he do?

I see no excuse and one has not been presented by anyone but people on the board that make excuses for them. If WBEN didn’t cover the story, there would be outrage. Of course that anger might also have to do with WBEN employing some ridiculous right wing program hosts.
 
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WBFO may have valid reasons for dropping the ball, but this will not go down in history as their proudest moment.
I doubt that NPR listeners in Buffalo will remember what WBFO was broadcasting during the storm. It appears that the station certainly could have done better. The news cycle quickly moves on. People that were holed up at home were likely watching TV anyway. The unfortunate ones that lost power may no longer own battery powered Radios...
 
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It’s possible that you are answering your own questions as to why this was an epic failure?

1. Of course, planning must take place beforehand, INDEED. Everyone knew a storm of massive proportions was arriving several days before it happened. Not a soul could do this? They likely have a bigger staff than WBEN.
By "in advance" I meant months and years with the appropriate budgeting, planning, installation and training. I did not mean, "oh, a storm is coming so we gotta' put something together". For most of the needs, that is too late.
2. I don’t know of any news station that doesn’t have the ability to broadcast from anywhere. It’s 2022. This has been the case for many years. I’m aware of a station in Buffalo that even provides live programming for a station in the Florida Keys. 680 News reporters and anchors in Toronto can take to the air in Montreal or Vancouver if need be.
Yes, but the systems, "synchronized software" and things like passwords and access permissions need to be done in advance. In every case you mention, a system was in place long before it was needed.
3. WBFO has state of the art equipment. Their reporters send back audio all the time. Even all the religious stations are fed from elsewhere. We have a broadcaster in Guelph that does live customized updates and cut ins for their company on several stations in Ontario. As well, there are religious stations in tiny towns that broadcast to and from Buffalo every day. If they can’t feed their transmitter from elsewhere, that’s an engineering failure.
Again, the software and connectivity have to be set up in advance and the people who are available to do reports or live broadcasts from home or another location need to have systems in place in advance.
4. If the staff wasn’t trained on the equipment, that is a fail, as well. Why weren’t they trained if that were the case?
That is my point. You need the equipment, installation at possible needed locations or on portable devices like laptops or even cellphones, and training.... and training refreshers and updates.
5. If their previous news director who commented here and her/his staff could do this sort of thing from their homes 12 years ago, of course they could do it now.
Not necessarily. Tech has changed immensely in 12 years, with nearly all stations moving from analog audio moving through wires to digital audio moving through optical systems. If they either did not yet update, or did not train on an update, it is as good as not having the system at all.
6. As far as “We only need one station,” WBEN, to broadcast is concerned, 90% of listening is done on FM. How much of a share does WBEN have of just that piddly 10% of the listeners?
Last I checked, radios have a thing called a "dial" and people can look quite easily for a station that is covering news. There is no need to have every station covering this kind of event, particularly since the staff at most stations is neither trained nor qualified to do anything except take calls with "how much snow is in your driveway now?" type conversations.
If the transmitter didn’t work, they have other options, such as continuing to broadcast on line or putting their vital programming on one of their FM stations. They put the WGR Sabres game on WBEN when there was a Bills conflict.
In this case, we are talking about a station that did not have another "sister" station. It's an NPR station, and what we don't know is what prevented them from going "all in" to cover this storm. It may be as simple as "nobody was in town and available to set things in motion" to some kind of facilities issue like "no power at the studios and the genny would not start".
7. If # 6 were true, then why do listeners support WBFO, and I assume there is at least some public funding for public radio in the States? Do they do this solely for NPR?
The station is probably not supported by listeners for its breaking news coverage but for its breadth of national NPR product as well as local origination.
8. I assume those who look for reasons to excuse such an epic failure, think of radio as an automated music service. A local news station is not at all the same as a voice-tracked playlist. So, if that’s the case, who needs radio? Satellite and Spotify are way better because they don’t run 20 minutes of commercials.
This was not a "breaking news" station. It's a local NPR affiliate which appears to have been either ill-prepared for a huge weather event on a weekend or which had internal technical or staffpower issues that impeded doing anything significant. Until we know "the rest of the story" it is hard to place blame on anyone.
9. I also assume those who don’t think it’s a big deal, never worked for a radio or TV news organization. When you work at one, it goes without saying, you are basically like a first responder when a disaster happens. This is a job for journalists, not DJs. Perhaps people with a radio news background could chime in?
Not every station is prepared for "first response". In fact, knowing this the EAS is set up to activate even if many stations are unmanned at night and on weekends... while most have no newspeople on the staff qualified to do anything original anyway.
10. How did WBEN get their staff to work and broadcast? Somehow they did.
They are obviously better prepared. And whatever system they had, it worked.
11. Has WBFO even made a statement on why they didn’t cover this story of life and limb?
Perhaps they are trying to figure out what went wrong. And that means not blaming past failures but looking on how to make sure this is not repeated. Of course, this is a storm not seen for nearly a half-century so they may simply have been overwhelmed.
12. This also isn’t about putting any reporters in harm’s way. You can gather information and make calls and put things together from the safety and comfort of your own home. You have internet, as well. You don’t have to stand in a snowbank with a whiteout and 100 kph winds to provide vital information for the community.
Again, we don't know why the station could not do this. It may have been an inability to connect "outsiders" with the studio, or issues at the studio that prevented live broadcasts. Or something else entirely. We don't yet know.
Someone decided a storm that killed 40 people wasn’t important. And if some catastrophe struck where they couldn’t get a feed, did they not have a strategic alliance in place with a TV station to run audio minus commercials or the Buffalo News to partner? CBC and NPR stations in cities across our countries do. I was in Northern California during the fires and the NPR station was running the audio from a commercial TV station that was providing commercial-free coverage. Presumably the NPR station studios had burned.
Again. Again. We don't know why things like this were not done. Obviously, human error, lack of operating equipment, lack of training, unavailable staff and similar things come to mind but we don't know yet what the reason was.
Why hasn’t WBFO made a statement saying what happened? No one was reachable for comment nor returned calls! Others, unrelated to the station have said there was a pipe that gave out elsewhere in the building. That is not an excuse for a station that had no trouble being on the air.
The station may have been on autopilot. I've been in stations that were evacuated due to bombs, fire alarms, hostage-taking guerrillas, earthquake damage and hurricanes and the like where the automation was running and "lights were on but nobody was home".
And reporters are most certainly equipped to report or they wouldn’t be reporters. No one would have to leave their home.
Not if they can't get "into" the system. It's unknown what happened, so this is just conjecture now.
Who is their news director now? What did she or he do?
If systems were down, the simple answer is "nothing".
I see no excuse and one has not been presented by anyone but people on the board that make excuses for them. If WBEN didn’t cover the story, there would be outrage. Of course that anger might also have to do with WBEN employing some ridiculous right wing program hosts.
Storms have nothing to do with the political philosophy of talk hosts. Let's not get off on a tangent when the simple question is, "what happened that prevented them from doing storm coverage when many think that such a station should have immediately focused on that issue?"
 
I doubt that NPR listeners in Buffalo will remember what WBFO was broadcasting during the storm.
You are correct that listeners will not remember what WBFO was broadcasting during the storm. However, the point that I was making is the inverse of this statement. People will remember where to go for critical information during an emergency. That lifeline may consist of a social media page, government website, TV station, radio station, weather app, etc.

Our brains recall this detail as part of our survival instinct. To this day, how many people still recall the coverage of Hurricane Katrina from WWL?

If WBFO stepped up to play this role, then the public would perceive the station as a critical service.
 
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