Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:However if you are in Chalk Hill, TX; Elloree, SC; Georgetown, CA; or Tunnel Hill, GA; an LPFM could be considered a part of their local disaster preparedness planning
Maybe...my limited experience there is that most of the town fathers, as it were, are part-timers. As you know, the LPFM stations I've worked with have been located IN schools, churches, and municipal buildings. Not free standing facilities. But we're talking about towns of 30,000 or more.
I really wish the central thrust for LPFM was in small towns. The reality is that a lot of people are going after the same large audiences that the big commercial stations have. While the law was written in a way that really prevents licensees from accumulating stations and competing for advertisers, it would have been better if it had limited the locations to areas no longer served by local radio. I don't know how you write that into a law. But I know a lot of people in populated areas are trying to jam LPFM stations onto the dial.
Getting back to the original topic, the regulating of broadcasting is a specialized thing, and not the same as regulating gas or electric companies. Even the FCC has a lot of trouble understanding how it all works. A few years ago, one of the commissioners came from a local utility board, and she recognized how different it was. In any event, the legislation sought by the representative in Oklahoma is not going to get anywhere.