Why WLRN would be okay with SFPMG still running their operations is an entirely different question.
I think that's really what this is about.
Why WLRN would be okay with SFPMG still running their operations is an entirely different question.
radioinsight.com
TL,DR.. as i understand it: The schools own the station, SFPMG is a seperate entity running the station for the school.. and SFPMG didnt have permission and or cant use WLRN Funds for this, as the funds are exclusively for WLRN.. and 104.7 isnt WLRNI don't see what the big deal is. SFPMG is just increasing the coverage of WLRN and providing Palm Bch County with a full power signal the same way they do the Keys with the Marathon station. The increased coverage should increase money collected by SFPMG for the benefit of all of the stations. Is this just a family squabble with Dade County Schools just throwing a hissy fit?
I don't see what the big deal is.
I don't see what the big deal is. SFPMG is just increasing the coverage of WLRN and providing Palm Bch County with a full power signal the same way they do the Keys with the Marathon station. The increased coverage should increase money collected by SFPMG for the benefit of all of the stations. Is this just a family squabble with Dade County Schools just throwing a hissy fit?
They are using money raised originally from WLRN facilities to buy a station that the School Board won't own. If the new station was owned by the Board, it would be as you describe and maybe they would have approved. The School Board will not own the new station; SFPMG will. So if SFPMG says "You know, we don't want to run WLRN anymore, we'll just compete with you in PBC with a station that we own. And we'll use all of your donor data to undercut your success in PBC.
Imagine if you hired me to run your Car Dealership, and then I use the money we made to buy another Car Dealership (without telling or even asking you), but this time I say I own it. But don't worry, I'll still run yours in good faith! Even though I obviously have a vested interested in mine being more successful....
Even if I used my own money (which is what they are arguing), do you still want me running your business when I own a complementary (or competing) business?
Even if I used my own money (which is what they are arguing), do you still want me running your business when I own a complementary (or competing) business?
But this is buying a car dealership in another town. There is little overlap and it just expands your market.They are using money raised originally from WLRN facilities to buy a station that the School Board won't own. If the new station was owned by the Board, it would be as you describe and maybe they would have approved. The School Board will not own the new station; SFPMG will. So if SFPMG says "You know, we don't want to run WLRN anymore, we'll just compete with you in PBC with a station that we own. And we'll use all of your donor data to undercut your success in PBC.
Imagine if you hired me to run your Car Dealership, and then I use the money we made to buy another Car Dealership (without telling or even asking you), but this time I say I own it. But don't worry, I'll still run yours in good faith! Even though I obviously have a vested interested in mine being more successful....
Even if I used my own money (which is what they are arguing), do you still want me running your business when I own a complementary (or competing) business?
It sounds like the court will need to decide whether or not the money for the purchase was obtained from a resource that should have otherwise gone towards operating WLRN.
Little overlap is hard to argue when WLRN and its translator regularly do as well or better in the ratings in WPB than in the Miami Market. There's no doubt that the School Board knows some of those Palm Beach listeners will stop giving to WLRN when they have a 50kW station owned by someone else in the market that is soliciting them.But th
But this is buying a car dealership in another town. There is little overlap and it just expands your market.
Little overlap is hard to argue when WLRN and its translator regularly do as well or better in the ratings in WPB than in the Miami Market. There's no doubt that the School Board knows some of those Palm Beach listeners will stop giving to WLRN when they have a 50kW station owned by someone else in the market that is soliciting them.
So you'd be ok with those people in that town buying their car from me instead of you? When a greater share in "the other town" already buy their cars from you than the people in your town? WLRN will lose market share.
And that doesn't even get into the ethics of SFPMG running WLRN when they own a competing station. Who do you think is going to get priority?
I mean, they "don't want that" the way a local hardware store doesn't want Home Depot building across the street. Oh and Home Depot is also running your store for you. They aren't specifically "happy" with the translator; maybe they would have been okay with buying WFLM. But SFPMG tried to do it behind their back. So they have to defend their market share. I don't understand how people are still parsing this, there's not much of a gray area on why WLRN is doing what they are doing. They were stabbed in the back by the company that's supposed to be working for them, who now wants to go out on their own and compete against them, and I'm sure still run their station too. Every single business or company with half a brain would be doing what they are doing in fighting it.I doubt K Love will make a move for 104.7 so Im guessing some other religious station operator will end up with 104.7 and west palm market will have to rely on what they have for public radio. I just feel a stronger WLRN all over south florida would be ideal but WLRN does not want that and happy with a translator. The reality is that all the Florida npr stations need to join forces as one network and save the expenses of trying to operate multiple independent stations across the state like we have now.
While I agree with all of what you and TheBigA have to say, it should be pointed out that WFLM would have served areas north of West Palm Beach (such as Jupiter) that WLRM currently does not cover. In other words, by handling this the way both the school board and the station management did, people north of West Palm Beach are not really going to be served by an NPR outlet for some time to come.
I was thinking that Indian River College, the owners of WQCS-FM in Fort Pierce, the next city with an NPR affiliate up the coast, might assist, but, as it turns out, a lot of the expansion of public radio stations and networks came with the assistance of the CPB, an entity that will no longer exist come October 1.
The entire court filing by Miami-Dade Schools against SFPMG is available to read as part of their Motion For Leave filing with the FCC.
They'll have them write 'I will not misappropriate funds' on the blackboard 200 timesI hope they teach SFPMG a lesson!