It wasn’t an acquisition. Cleveland State continues to own and administer the license.
I said "acquired the responsibility" - they're still responsible for an additional FM signal as the result of this, and the coverage isn't that great. Engineering, upkeep, all of that, now falls on them.
I'm simply taking the university at their word. They, themselves, said it wasn't financial. You seem to think I'm suggesting it should or could be undone. I'm not arguing that. I'm saying they were very shortsighted in how this was handled, and it's getting more people upset than you'd think. It looks bad from all angles. People who might even have supported a jazz station don't respect how the parties involved in this behaved or made the change.
The WRAS example is suspect to me, because the government of the state of Georgia directly replicated NPR programming in market at taxpayer expense. Theory is, they did that to slant the "local" programming in favor of the government. Had nothing to do with what was or wasn't being done on WRAS or its sustainability. And even then, they let the students have nights to continue programming music. KUSF had a different set of factors. I'm speaking to what is, and as a public radio supporter, I don't like seeing public radio get an additional PR issue because of its own missteps. Now's not a great time for that.
It's also amazing to me that WCSB does in fact have the level of support it does. Some of these stations don't. People are noticing, and not in a good way.
On a personal level, I like jazz. I also don't think the decline in student radio is good for culture, and in fact, we're seeing stations with high levels of student interest once again. There's a valid role for student radio to play, and reasonable arguments in favor of its continued existence.
As you say, more to come. But I don't think it's good - for the students or community. And you might see more pushback than you expect. Do you really want to accelerate the message that FM is only for large donors and more elite non profits and declining corporations? This is how you send that message to students and community members who cared enough to be involved with actual radio. Not an audience I'd say radio needs more disinterest from.