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www.2023grassrootsradioconference.com
www.2023grassrootsradioconference.com
Exactly, goes to implicit bias on the part of the moderator.Please review your definition of 'bashing'. Regardless of whether content belongs on a thread, applying the 'bashing' label to polite but critical communication is both incorrect and offensive.
I'll add that LPFMs are almost entirely volunteer-staffed. Some are one-person operations, assisted by computer scheduling and playback capabilities.If someone is giving a presentation at the GRC, on, let's say studio building, programming, radio automation, etc., it is irrelevant to whether their parent organization has missed an annual report. I think the comments along the lines of "this person should not be trusted because they are associated with an LPFM with a lapsed corporate status" is not necessary and uncalled for in this thread. We have already beaten that dead horse in a different thread. There's no need to have it leak over into other threads.
Exactly, there's a huge learning curve for LPFMers. Unfortunately, the FCC does not give LPFM licensees an "owners manual". This is where REC steps up.The idea of LPFM was to give community groups and individuals an opportunity to have a voice. That statement means that a lot of disenfranchised people got stations; often the rules and regulations of both having an FCC license and a non-profit entity were all new, confusing and mystifying.
There will be, but those who reach out to the LPFM community will get help. Many LPFMers are not doing this.The whole idea was to give smaller voices a station... and "small" usually means that getting every dollar is hard work. These are not groups that can spend a lot on legal and regulation advisers and counsel... so there will be errors.
The grassroots radio movement predates the creation of LPFM. Obviously, there has been a lot of discontent towards commercial radio since the Telecom Act. The Telecom Act led to the uptick in pirates in the late 90s and would eventually turn into the creation of LPFM. I work with many commercial broadcasters of all shapes and sizes and while all we hear about is iHeart, Audacy and EMF (noncommercial), there are still quite a few mom and pops and small regional owners and they are supported here.As a commercial broadcaster at heart, I find some of the GRC presenters to be a bit strident in their views and opinions of the for-profit sector, but I was also disturbed and offended decades ago by Lorenzo Milam and even the antagonism of the United Church of Christ. So we have to look at the perspective and purpose of LPFMs before being so critical.
...threaten to edit or alter a post when they personally didn't agree with the comment. or when it was taking a thread in a direction they personally didn't want it to go in...
With all due respect Scott, you know as well as I that commercial and public broadcasters of full-class stations don't have their hands held unless they pay for it by lawyer. And LPFM's don't have nearly the requirements or paperwork, let alone apparently keeping up with the basic entity registration to remain as a licensee.The process is not always an easy one, whether it's the initial licensing and construction or all the complicated pieces of ongoing compliance (EAS NPT reporting! Renewals! Music licensing! Underwriting rules!)
That, and I suspect they don't have the resources to audit what amount to 'auxillary services'.The FCC knows that, and in my experience has given a lot of leeway to LPFM operators who are trying to do the right thing and run their stations correctly.
Again, professional broadcasters don't have that option.Again, just my opinion - but it felt like you came in here very hot, looking to create lists of stations with compliance issues and call them out publicly. That's your right, of course, but it's not the way most of us here operate. I would much rather work behind the scenes with a station and the FCC to bring them back into compliance if needed. In my decades of experience, there's usually nothing to be gained by calling a station out publicly if its operators are trying to be compliant and might just need a little help to get it right.
It depends on the reason/motivation for the objection. One of my main rules over here is "pick your battles".What you might not know is that there are a handful of what I'll call "FCC complaint trolls" who seem to have nothing better to do than to file petitions against LPFM and translator operators for perceived violations, even when it's on the other side of the country and nowhere near them. For a small operator, that can trigger the need to hire a communications lawyer and pay thousands upon thousands of dollars to file responses and try to retain their licenses. That can be a death sentence for the finances of a small station. I don't think any of those trolls lurk here, but I'd really prefer not to have to find out.