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KTPB Campaign

A group known as SOAR--Save Our Arts Radio--has taken out a quarter-page ad in the Sunday Longview News-Journal, rallying support to oppose the sale of KTPB at Kilgore College. Prominent members of the arts communnities in Longview and Tyler are listed as figure heads in the campaign and the ad itself points up some salient arguments against the station's sale. But opponents all along have overlooked the fact that the FCC likely won't block a licensee from divesting itself of a frequency if the license holder no longer wishes for whatever reasons--financial or otherwise, to continue its right to broadcast.

The ad urges people contesting the sale to send nine copies of their letters of protest to the FCC by Thursday of this coming week. Critics of the opposition group's action are calling the campaign too little, too late, especially since the comment period opened weeks ago and those against the change over are just now getting around to getting an organized effort moving to call the FCC's attention to opposition of the sale.

KTPB of course for more than a decade has performed a significant service to patrons of the arts, but a better effort probably would be made by people with the needed money and motivation to seek another frequency for arts broafcasting in the East Texas area. The ad pointed out that listeners in East Texas have been receiving "free access to the arts" via KTPB, so it's likely those persons wanting that access are going to discover that it will now come at a price. Kilgore College has grown tired of financing a public service that has been largely funded by the college itself and decreasingly supported by the public.
 
I wish the SOAR folks luck. I'd prefer that KTPB remained more or less intact and continued broadcasting some form of fine arts programming. I’d also prefer it was local. But I can't see it happening. Under current rules, the FCC really can only consider the legality of the sale. A willing seller has made a deal with a willing buyer. As long as neither party has any unwanted baggage, then there is little the Commission can do. The idea of broadcasting being in the public interest is pretty much history, thanks to the folks we elected, who brought us the Communications Act of 1996. I think that is sad, but it is the reality of broadcasting it the 21st Century.

About the only thing the SOAR people can do, at least as I see it, is convince the FCC that they should not issue a waver of the local origination studio in the station's City of License. The current plan is EMF would get a waiver, and set up some minimal "local origination" facilities at the transmitter site. That doesn't have to be much. A small mixer and a microphone would qualify. The rest would be delivered by satellite.

The fly in the ointment is the KTPB transmitter site is not in Kilgore, the station's City of License. If they don't get a waiver, it would require EMF to set up a local studio and office somewhere in Kilgore. That might prove to be interesting, if they did.

On a recent trip to Shreveport, I had a chance to listen to K-LOVE on a full power station that EMF owns, licensed to Homer, LA. It is a very slick format. I think it will do very well in East Texas. I probably won't have it set on my car radio's buttons, but I can see how a lot of folks will. That's not very good news for the existing Christian stations. In fact, I'll bet that it eats into some commercial ratings as well.

We'll see.
 
Chuck's observation on the now mostly ignored public interest (convenience and necessity) clause of the Communikcations Act of 1934 accurately summarizes the FCC's atttitude of rarely, if ever anymore, considering that particular requirement in licensing and license transfer actions. Time was a group such as SOAR opposing a license change possibly could have mounted a campaign based on a switch over allegedly not being in the public interest. The public interest requirement survived the Communications Act of 1996, but many observers say little of what goes on under consolidation and corporate monopoly of radio is in the "public interest."

The folks in SOAR quite obviously aren't the first to oppose a license transfer, anywhere, and like the other opponents of changes, they will find, as Chuvk said, provided there is a willing buyer and a willing seller, the FCC most probably will approve the change pro forma, rubber stamp the paperwork, and that will be it.

SOAR has valid concens and for the most part well states its case, but, plainly, its best hope is to seek another outlet for arts programming in the Kilgore-Tyler-Longview and surrounding area, because unless there is some heavy hitting political and other pressure brought to bear by big forces in Washington (not likely) the sale to EMF is a done deal. The final stage of the planned change could possibly involve the political dynamic, and as the old saying states, "Politics DOES create strange bed fellows."
 
The war may be escalating.

I went to KTPB this afternoon for a routine inspection of our 105.3 translator which shares tower space at the KTPB studio. While I was there, a free lance photographer from Dallas was also visiting. It seems the New York Times has picked up on the story. I'll be interested in reading it. If nothing else, they are going down fighting.

I wish them luck. Quite a few of my friends work there.
 
Re: NYT story about KTPB Campaign

(Here's the story...)

In this landscape of oil derricks and Rangerettes — a renowned drill team dressed in smiles and miniskirts — a tiny radio station sends out a lifeline to classical music lovers in East Texas.

It is KTPB, the station of Kilgore College, which educates the children of oil hands and other blue-collar workers. Now the college has decided it can no longer afford to support the station and has announced its sale. The new owner? A Christian-music broadcasting company from California, which will pay the college $2.46 million over 10 years.

Richard Jenkins, the president of the company, EMF Broadcasting, acknowledges that the sale has some people in the area outraged. "I know there are some unhappy campers out there," he said. "But it always happens with change."

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/26/a...&en=c0e1d0444178be5a&ei=5094&partner=homepage

(Free registration my be required to access the above article.)
 
They seem to be getting quite a response from the story. A friend who works at KTPB tells me that they've had calls from as far away as New Zealand, and offers to help from various far flung places.
 
be interesting to see this play out I don't think they can do anything to block the sale but when EMF asks for a main studio wavier that could be a different story
 
That's for sure. The big push to save the station just began much too late, as if those wanting KTPB to stay put never really thought the school would close the deal and would back down when the opposition showed itself. Folks, this decision is about money, which schools especially must be hyper-sensitive to in this era of dwindling budgets. The idea for the sale wasn't a capricious administrative decision by the college president and the trustees. It was financially driven.

True, the sale goes against the grain of a lot of people, and understandably so. Listeners had grown accustomed to a good. solid broadcast service and now it's on the verge of going away at the flip of a switch. A bitter pill to swallow, but there's virtually no way a save can be effected. The widespread support and calls to the station are interesting but in itself the moral support won't change what's in the making.
 
The thing about it is...the station is obligated to serve its city of license. If all of the outrage comes from sources that are outside Kilgore, then the FCC probably won't care and will okay the sell.

The irony is that the new owners will not "serve" the community of Kilgore.
 
True. The provision of a licensee serving the public interest, convenience, and necessity is little more than a shell of a requirement nowadays.

The sale unfortunately will probably be given pro forma approval with little or no consideration and review by the FCC.
 
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