Nobody at WCSB was fired. They were all students, not employees. The university owned the station, and was no longer interested in running a radio station. So they turned over operations to professionals. For some reason, these students mistakenly felt they were employees and that this was their radio station. They were wrong. The station belonged to the university. It still does. Nothing there has changed.
Sorry if I wasn't clear -- since you were making a comparison to WPSU, I,
also made a comparison to WPSU. I understand and am aware that the students at WCSB aren't employees. I'm not aware of WCSB students referring to themselves as such. Could you point me to an example of them doing so?
By the way -- the actual employees here are the University president and leadership of the "Division of Student Belonging and Success" (under which, student organizations like WCSB fall) -- that would include the VP for Student Belonging and Success and the Dean of Students. The students would be the ones paying their salaries.
Sometimes, it seems like college administrators forget that without those annoying students, there wouldn't be a University. I think if they'd remembered that, perhaps they would've put some more thought and care into how this was handled.
Once again, who owns the station? The students or the university? It's not "their radio station." It belongs to the university. It's up to the university to decide what happens to it. Not the students. They have the money they raised, and they're welcome to use it with an online station they will own.
Yes, the University owns the station. But, this is a station that was started by students and run by students as a club for 50 years, so I don't think it should be a surprise that the students feel some ownership of the station, too. As the licensee, of course, the University is free to do with the station what they want, and if they no longer have the staff to help manage a radio station or the interest in owning one, this deal with Ideastream certainly makes a lot of sense. But...
What we've seen is there was no "better way to handle it." The students were going to be angry no matter what happened, because they thought they owned this radio station. They don't, and that reality is hard for them to handle.
I agree that there were going to be folks upset about this regardless of how well Cleveland State and Ideastream handled it but just completely disagree that this is the best that Cleveland State could do. And you seem to be presuming a lot of entitled or bad behavior by the students.
Speaking of those campus administrators, my favorite part of that "Sound of Ideas" roundtable this morning was the former staff advisor calling in to rebut Dr. Bloomberg's claim that nobody was laid off and that he had just retired -- he said he was told he'd be laid off, and that he had to beg them for two more months so he could make it to 30 years for his retirement. I guess there's the low bar for how this could have been handled even worse -- they could have fired him two months short of his 30th anniversary and not let him get his full retirement. Other than that, I don't see how CSU could have handled this any worse.
Scott's already summed it up better than I could as far as what a "better" transition could have looked like, but his suggestion for pre-recorded farewell shows was also an area where I feel like Ideastream could perhaps have done more -- if, with the former staff advisor's retirement, the University felt like they wouldn't be able to manage monitoring the content of those shows, isn't that something Ideastream could have helped with?
Speaking of...
One more thing: People keep bringing up that this happened on college radio day. I doubt very much that anybody at the university knew that. How would they? Is it a university holiday? Of course not. At my former college station, the faculty advisor was a member of the organization that runs college radio day. So he knows about it, and lets the university know. That's how things work at a college station where you have university involvement. Everybody knows what the other one's doing. That wasn't the case at WCSB. The students were operating in their own little world, disconnected from the university.
Yes, this is an obscure celebration, and it's clear the campus leadership don't have a clue about radio, so I'll concede that yes, CSU leadership not knowing about College Radio Day fits. But this seemed like another missed opportunity for Ideastream -- even if the University was unaware and/or unconcerned about dumping their student radio station on World College Radio Day, it's too bad nobody at Ideastream put 2 and 2 together and thought about the optics of an abrupt takeover of WCSB on College Radio Day. Then again, Ideastream seems to be completely surprised and unprepared for the blowback they've received so far (I especially liked them trying to tell angry folks on Facebook "
Please know that this is not a takeover" and the report of
their ops manager blasting folks on Facebook under a fake name), so I guess I shouldn't be surprised by that, either.
Just a shame all around. I'm sad to see WCSB members lose their radio station without any input into the decision or chance to say goodbye. And it's a shame that Ideastream and Cleveland State have alienated many of their supporters and alumni with how they've handled this not-a-takeover. Public media needs all the support they can get right now, and while I realize Facebook and Reddit can be echo chambers for anger, there sure seem to be a lot of angry folks on Ideastream's Facebook page and Reddit saying they've canceled their Ideastream memberships.