Globe says Nov 1
N1WVQ said:Probably. Jacksonville has had Catholic radio for years on WQOP= Queen Of Peace.
73,
N1WVQ
MRBIboredop said:
Laurence Glavin said:Isn't there a "holy city" in Iran called Qum? Kind of close.
Dighton Rockhead said:Laurence Glavin said:Isn't there a "holy city" in Iran called Qum? Kind of close.
If I'm not mistaken, the spelling of that city actually IS: "QOM".
MRBIboredop said:The FCC and the EEOC get kind of PO'd when you are not P.C., and a mis-worded advertisement would certainly raise some examiners eyebrows down in Washington.
Hey Paul has retired from his sports book gig, maybe he can try his hand at radio. With all the hats that job description has the candidate wearing, the new hire is going to need 8 arms to juggle the work load.
Now the requirement to be a good catholic.... hmmmm any lawyers on the board care to chime in?
4CX1000A said:MRBIboredop said:The FCC and the EEOC get kind of PO'd when you are not P.C., and a mis-worded advertisement would certainly raise some examiners eyebrows down in Washington.
Hey Paul has retired from his sports book gig, maybe he can try his hand at radio. With all the hats that job description has the candidate wearing, the new hire is going to need 8 arms to juggle the work load.
Now the requirement to be a good catholic.... hmmmm any lawyers on the board care to chime in?
I find it astonishing that a U.S. broadcast licensee can openly require candidates for employment to hold a particular religious faith.
MRBIboredop said:There must be an exemption for religious groups. Either that or these are the dumbest radio managers on the planet ( Except for Coffee Boy and the Empress )
http://www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/religion.html#_Toc203359502
D. Bona Fide Occupational Qualification
Title VII permits employers to hire and employ employees on the basis of religion if religion is “a bona fide occupational qualification [“BFOQ”] reasonably necessary to the normal operation of that particular business or enterprise.”[68] Religious organizations do not typically need to rely on this BFOQ defense, however, because the “religious organization” exception in Title VII permits them to prefer their co-religionists. See supra § I-C. It is well settled that for employers that are not religious organizations and therefore seek to rely on the BFOQ defense to justify a religious preference, the defense is a narrow one and can rarely be successfully invoked.[69]
N1WVQ said:Jacksonville has had Catholic radio for years on WQOP= Queen Of Peace.
4CX1000A said:I find it astonishing that a U.S. broadcast licensee can openly require candidates for employment to hold a particular religious faith.
JIBGUY said:Massachusetts laws against discrimination around 1988, against sexual orientation and sex-discrimination, specifically EXCLUDES religious organizations.
raccoonradio said:I doubt it will come back but imagine if we had the wonderful Fairness Doctrine...atheists,
Protestants, Muslims etc. demand equal time on 1060. An anti-black group demands time
on WILD.
4CX1000A said:It turns out that there is a specific exemption in the FCC rules (73.2080): "Religious radio broadcasters may establish religious belief or affiliation as a job qualification for all station employees."
It goes on to say: "For purposes of this rule, a religious broadcaster is a licensee which is, or is closely affiliated with, a church, synagogue, or other religious entity, including a subsidiary of such an entity." That would exclude Salem, which I believe is a publicly traded company, but probably includes Holy Family.