Nice Above Fold - Page 715
Florida bill would allow state money to non-CPB funded stations
A bill in the Florida Legislature would amend a statute that limits state money for public broadcasting only to stations under the purview of CPB. It adds “nondenominational television stations licensed by the FCC as full-power educational broadcast stations”as eligible for funding via the State Board of Education. “What this bill would do is open it up to a larger group of licensees,” said Sandra Ceseretti, g.m. of WSRE at Pensacola Junior College. “It could be community or perhaps religious licensees that are nondenominational. It would take the current infrastructure and grow it, perhaps to another 200 new licensees.” As the college’s newspaper, the Corsair, reports, that could dilute funding to existing stations, causing problems WSRE.G4 receives more time to gather digital media comments for FCC
The FCC has granted an extension to APTS, CPB, NPR and PBS for comments on the report, “The Future of Media and Information Needs of Communities in A Digital Age.” The deadline, originally March 8, is now May 7. The G4 told the FCC the delay was necessary because of the “wide-ranging nature” of the topics involved. Also, the organizations are planning regional town meetings to solicit viewpoints of community leaders and broadcast station execs. FCC order here (PDF).FCC presents preview of National Broadband Plan
At a public meeting in Washington today, the FCC previewed part of its upcoming report to Congress on a National Broadband Plan. The focus was the “national purposes” portion of the plan, “designed to support America’s competitive advantages in key sectors of the economy and society,” according to an FCC press release (PDF) with details of the presentation (a more specific report, also in PDF, here). The agency discussed potential solutions for challenges in areas including health care technology, education, energy, jobs, public safety and civic engagement. A final report is due to Congress in mid-March.
Bole plans pubmedia get-togethers at SXSW
Rob Bole, CPB’s veep of digital media strategy, is working to bring together public media folks at the upcoming SXSW event. “I see an opportunity to help get out of parochial grooves, network, make connections and generally be more collaborative,” he told Current in an email. He’s gathering a list of interested pubmedia types that he’ll redistribute. There’ll be a call for “SXSW newbies” with Kevin Dando, director of digital and education communications at PBS. Bole is also planning a Sunday evening social event, a #pubsxsw Twitter hashtag for back-channel communications, and a post-SXSX briefing via WebEx conferencing. Interested? Email Bole at rbole(at)cpb.org,Indiana's WNIT lays off eight, outsources several jobs
WNIT Public Television in South Bend, Ind., is letting go eight staffers and restructuring in the wake of a 50 percent drop in state funding, according to the Elkhart Truth newspaper. The station had been studying a restructuring plan but the $200,000 loss moved it more quickly ahead, president and g.m. Mary Pruess told the newspaper. Employees were cut from several departments and levels of seniority. And bookkeeping, accounting, program scheduling and marketing will be outsourced. The state is just one facing a fiscal meltdown that endangers pubcasters (Current, Jan. 25, 2010).NPR unveils its plans for SXSW music extravaganza
NPR will produce two live music showcases from the South by Southwest Music and Media conference: the previously announced March 17 festival opener to be headlined by Spoon, and a March 18 daytime concert featuring the Sleigh Bells. (Details on both line-ups here.) Both shows will be offered for broadcast by NPR stations, as well as live webcasts for online listeners on NPR Music. Five station partners–Austin’s KUT, New York’s WFUV, Philadelphia’s WXPN, Minnesota Public Radio’s The Current, and Seattle’s KEXP–will collaborate on the SXSW coverage by producing artist interviews and reporting on other performances throughout the festival.
KPBS considered format switch, station purchase, document reveals
A blogger for the San Diego Reader is reporting on a project last year from local pubcaster KPBS to buy an additional local FM station and switch its existing news frequency to a “lucrative classical music format.” That plan was not executed, says Matt Potter, staff writer and editor at the publication. He obtained the report — labeled Privileged and Confidential — titled, “Funding Our News Future: A Case for Purchasing a New Radio Frequency,” through California’s public records act. That study says that KPBS management was looking to purchase KPRI, a 30,000-watt FM station, for $8 million. Potter quotes the document: “A properly run classical music station can generate significant revenue.How viable is WLIU's bid for independence?
The campaign to establish Long Island’s WLIU as an independent public radio outlet is faltering, according to this report by the Hamptons Independent. With a looming deadline to relocate from WLIU’s longtime home on the Southhampton campus of Stonybrook University, station leaders are also trying to raise money through a new nonprofit, Peconic Public Broadcasting, to acquire WLIU’s license. The Independent reports that actor Alec Baldwin, one of several celebrities who backed the campaign, is not fulfilling his pledge. Meanwhile, critics of G.M. Wally Smith say he hasn’t done enough to reduce operating expenses. “We do have a plan,” Smith said.Pubmedia online outreach projects need metrics to measure success: Jessica Clark
Jessica Clark, director of the Center for Social Media’s Future of Public Media project, takes on a big question on the MediaShift blog: How well are stations measuring success in multiplatform public media projects created to inform and engage the public? “Very few stations define success with concrete metrics,” Clark writes. “Most examples are anecdotal. (‘I just have a sense.’) What they consider to be ‘successful’ is very subjective. Those that do have an idea of what success means to them include metrics such as page views, unique users, and calls into station when online offerings fail to work.” She cites “Embracing Digital: A Review of Public Media Efforts Across the United States,” a June 2009 CPB-funded report by Gupta Consulting, which revealed that “few station executives can quote quantitative measures of either goals or achievements related to their digital offerings.”Florida Channel nixes use of its video on candidate's website
WFSU at Florida State University has demanded that its video of an Air Force commander discussing offshore drilling be removed from a state House candidate’s website. Democrat David Pleat thought the video explained the reasons he opposes oil drilling near the Gulf Coast, so he put a copy from Youtube.com on his campaign Web site, according to the Northwest Florida Daily News. The video “can be posted for educational purposes,” said Florida Channel Executive Director Beth Switzer. “We can’t, and are not allowed to, grant use in political advertisements or on websites.” Pleat’s site now carries a red X over the spot where the video once played.Boston Mag portrays rifts within WGBH over radio expansion
In a lengthy feature on WGBH’s ambitions to compete against WBUR for NPR News audiences, Boston Magazine goes behind the scenes to describe rifts between WGBH management and rank and file. By its account, WGBH staff were demoralized by months of budget cuts and downsizing when station leaders opted to spend $14 million on all-classical WCRB. Author Paul Kix portrays the scene during a staff meeting at which WGBH veep Marita Rivero announced the decision: “one woman sobbed and, according to numerous accounts, screamed something at Rivero to the effect of ‘Jesus, you’ve got a lot of nerve! I can’t believe this has happened.'”FCC chair previews broadband recommendations for Congress
Today in Washington, FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski (right) provided insights into what will be contained in the agency’s National Broadband Plan report to Congress next month. In a speech to the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (PDF), he cited several important issues, including spectrum use. He said that the commission will make the recommendation to “free up a significant amount of spectrum in the years ahead for ample licensed and unlicensed use.” Experts have been predicting a coming spectrum auction, which might leave pubcasters with a tricky decision (“At what cost spectrum? Stations may face choice: Cash soon or opportunities later,” Current, Feb.America only mediocre in broadband efforts compared with other countries, study says
An international broadband study out today (see previous item for national numbers) shows the United States is a “middle of the pack” performer on broadband efforts, but has higher prices for high-speed and next generation Internet. The research was commissioned by the FCC and conducted by examination of existing literature from 30 countries by the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University. Another finding: America has 30 wifi free and pay hotspots per 100,000 residents; that compares with Sweden, which has 80. The 333-page report in PDF form is here.WVIA in Pennsylvania back on the air after transmitter site fire
WVIA, a dual licensee in Pittston, Pa., is slowly returning to the air after a devastating electrical fire on Friday. Newswatch 16, in nearby Moosic, Pa., has loaned out an unused transmitter. The FCC okayed the shift in order to restore the signal, according to the Scranton Times-Tribune. Over-the-air viewers can rescan their TVs to find the new PBS signal, Newswatch 16 reports. Radio is at reduced power but operating. WVIA will rebuild the transmitter site but WVIA President Bill Kelley said the building is a complete loss. “That building is toast. Every transmitter, every wire, every tube.NPR's investigative unit reports on Christmas Day bomb suspect
“Going Radical,” an NPR investigative series that begins airing tomorrow, is the first to be produced by the new reporting unit headed by Suzanne Reber. The three-part series examines the radicalization of the Christmas Day bomb suspect Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab. Three reporters–Peter Kenyon, Dina Temple-Raston and Ofeibea Quist-Arcton–collaborated on the investigation, according to Poynter Online. Within NPR headquarters, the investigative team working under Reber includes correspondents Daniel Zwerdling and Joseph Shapiro, librarian Barbara Van Woerkom and computer-assisted reporter Robert Benincasa. NPR plans to hire a producer/off-air reporter to complete the team, but journalists will “cycle through” the unit on assignments, NPR News chief Ellen Weiss says.
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