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You Did It! Congratulations!

The Ad Hoc Committee for KPFK Community Radio welcomes all of the KPFK Local Station Board election candidates to KPFK governance, “winners” and “losers” alike, since they’ve all proved their dedication and commitment to our station through a grueling election cycle.

Most especially, we look forward to seeing our candidates, Rodrigo Argueta, Ian Johnston, Fred Klunder, Dutch Merrick, and John Parker, leading the LSB to fulfill its commitment to our listeners and staff.

We extend our deepest thanks to all the voters who looked beyond expensive mailers and the status quo to seek out the candidates committed to the Pacifica Mission, local decision-making, transparency and responsibility, diversity, Spanish-language programs, and listener accountability. Our voters rock!

We also thank our Local Election Supervisor, Michael Sanchez. Michael had a lot of baggage to carry from past elections. Not only did he handle did the pressure with aplomb, he also set a new standard for what our elections should be.

We hope to see all of the candidates at our LSB meetings. They offered some great ideas for the station throughout the past three months, and we look forward to seeing those ideas come to pass. They’ve all picked up a lot of important information about how governance happens here at K and when they put that with their ideas, we’ll have a dynamic and truly progressive station with everybody’s help. There’s plenty of work to go around in the station, on committees, and at LSB meetings. See you in January!

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Toward an Understanding of the Causes of KPFK’s Conflict: A Voters’ Guide

Friends,

I’ve been reading all the KPFK election analyses, charges and countercharges, and arcane commentary, and I can imagine how confusing it must be to be plowing through this to fill out a ballot. If your ballot is still on your desk or over there on the table, go grab it and a pen, and lay it out in front of you while I try to sort out what you’ve been hearing. When you finish, fill out your ballot. You need to get it to the station by Thursday, October 15, so if you’re too late to mail it, grab yours and your friend’s ballot and head to 3729 Cahuenga Blvd. West in North Hollywood. Your choices in this election matter that much.

Full disclosure: I’m sitting here in the catbird seat on the Pacifica National Board, and I’m rooting for the candidates with the Ad Hoc Committee to Strengthen KPFK:

What you’re hearing is what’s going on

Let me take a moment to break it down for you, because all of the confusion really does come down to what you want KPFK and Pacifica to be.

You heard some of the confusion in our fund drive: is KPFK going to keep its cutting edge in public affairs, or is it going to be a self-help station, geared to the narcissistic needs of those of us trying to cope with aches, pains, and wrinkles? One side is betting that you’re looking for “Ageless Answer” to firm up that sagging jawline. I’m betting that you want to be part of the dialogue about our neighborhoods and our world.

One side, the Committee To Strengthen KPFK, was founded by Grace Aaron and now promotes her spouse among their candidates. Grace was chair of the Local Station Board when Eva Georgia left us, and in February Grace became the Interim Executive Director of Pacifica and Chair of the Pacifica National Board. Under her leadership, General Manager Sean Heitkemper resigned and two other general managers’ positions were vacated. The two largest stations, KPFK and WBAI, have interim appointees for both their general manager and their program director. At the National Office, the Chief Financial Officer has been temporary for eight months and the Executive Director has been interim for over a year. Our professionals are leaving in droves.

For the fiscal year ending September 30, 2009, the preliminary balance sheet shows a total for net assets and liabilities of $9,253,098.03. The audit for September 30, 2008 indicates the same total was $10,229,082. When Grace tells you this board majority has turned a corner in the financial crisis, consider that the total for September 2007 was $8,613,848, and look at the direction of that turn. The last significant budget cuts were staff layoffs in November 2008. It was onlylast year that we in Southern California were shocked at the twenty-day fund drives at WBAI in New York. Our just-completed fund drive was 25 days long. And now you know why we just finished KPFK’s longest fund drive.

Where it’s coming from

Besides the programming changes you’ve heard, the exodus of management and the programmers you’ve wondered about, and the financial “turn around,” there’s a fundamental difference in vision. One side wants Pacifica to be bigger, and the strategy to get there is to appeal to a broader audience. That means less community programming and more national programming, broadcasting the same “flagship” shows across all five stations, like (you can fill in your favorite mainstream radio network here). If you listen closely, you can hear that in our newly combined evening news broadcast dominated by KPFA in Berkeley, while KPFK’s news department is left with a single full-time reporter. The simultaneous pitching at KPFA and KPFK is another hint. “Something’s Happening” is bragging about its extra half-hour, while the morning Spanish-language news show “Informativo Pacifica” has been pushed to a late evening slot. The evening Spanish-language programmers are left to wonder where they’re going to fit, and the predominantly Black late night music programmers worry that they’ll have to give way. Expect more programming changes, especially to the so-called “narrow interest” public affairs shows, in the weeks ahead. When bigger means broader, it means something closer to the middle. Amy Goodman has already put the Interim Executive Director on notice that she’s not happy with similar changes at WBAI, and one of the CTSK candidates is openly suggesting that Amy is getting money to cover up the truth of 9-11.

In the year ahead, your contribution will help KPFK will pay for extensive Arbitron statistics. Arbitrons are the standard measure of the number of listeners to commercial radio, and, under the current leadership, will take on a more prominent role in measuring a show’s success. Arbitron methodology is now under investigation by the House Committee for Oversight and Government Reform, which has cited “persistent problems”; with undercounted minority sample audiences, but that might not matter so much if KPFK’s programming continues in the direction its heading. The question is, should Pacifica programming be Mission-driven, or should it add measures of listenership that are being investigated by Congress for racial bias?

Broader audiences mean bigger costs, and, for a year, rumors have been buzzing about how to pay for all these changes. One of the most insidious is the mumbling about underwriting: having foundations and other non-profits pay for shows of their choice in exchange for mentions on the air. You can hear underwriting on any NPR station. One Pacifica director (from another station) told me we need, “an audience that can afford us.” And maybe that’s an audience that will donate to foundation underwriters, too.

Don’t pick up your pen yet. Lean back and imagine that the Pacifica National Office threatens to lock KPFK management out of our transmission tower and summarily replaces both the General Manager and the Program Director with friends of the Executive Director. Imagine the new management’s first actions, in just two weeks, were firing your favorite paid staff and banning volunteer programmers. You can stop imagining now. That’s the WBAI story. In the midst of an economic depression and strapped with fixed expenses for its building and tower that are more than triple that of any other station, the National Office’s solution is to overturn everything familiar at WBAI. Perhaps you’ve heard that the Interim Executive Director has “saved” WBAI, that contributions, the money promised to WBAI, are up because of the new management, but this weekend we heard that fulfillment rate, the number of people who actually paid that money, is down by close to 20%.

Some uncomfortable history

Allow me a brief digression into recent history. It’s uncanny that the current actions of the leadership of Pacifica mirror, to a remarkable degree, the board of directors that was unseated in 2002 after demands for participatory governance:
Back in 1999, Pacifica National Board Chair Mary Frances Berry began a series of interventions in local stations following a widely broadcast concern that Corporation for Public Broadcasting funds were in jeopardy; in 2009, Pacifica National Board Chair Grace Aaron (also Interim Executive Director) begins a series of interventions in local stations after a widely broadcast concern that the network was facing a financial shortfall.

  • On December 22, 2000, Executive Director Bessie Wash changed the locks at the WBAI station; on April 1, 2009 the iED orders the locks changed at the WBAI transmitter tower. It was a decade earlier to the day, on April 1, 1999, that then Executive Director Lyn Chadwick fired KPFA’s General Manager Nichole Sawaya for refusing to cooperate in consolidating the Berkeley’s administration and staffing into the National Office. Today, most of WBAI’s finances are now managed out of the National Office.
  • In December of 2000, Wash replaced WBAI’s General Manager Valerie Van Isler with Utrice Leid; on May 4, 2009, the current iED replaces WBAI’s General Manager Anthony Riddle with LaVarn Williams.
  • In December, 2000, Leid fires programmer Sharan Harper and progressive Program Director and popular Wake-Up Call host Bernard White, and locks them out of the station; in May, 2009, Williams fires programmer Ayo Harrington and progressive Program Director and popular Wake-Up Call host Bernard White, and locks them out of the station.
  • On January 24, 2001, Leid issues a “gag order” prohibiting on-air discussion of Pacifica; on April 20, 2009, the iED issues an order that effectively prohibits any uncomplimentary comments about people associated with WBAI. On July 17, the order is extended across the network.

The other side

If you’ve followed me this far, I should assure you that there is hope short of another Pacifica Struggle. There is another side, one that wants KPFK to be deeper, not broader. We want to reach more progressive, future-oriented people. That means community-based programming, more autonomy for KPFK, and greater diversity among our listeners. We want to find a thousand new $50 members, before we solicit a single $50,000 major donor. Right now, we’re the minority, but with your vote, we won’t be in 2010. Locally, we’re the Ad Hoc Committee for KPFK Community Radio, and we need you to stand and vote with us.

We have as our principles:

  • Implementing the core values of the Pacifica Mission: voices by and for people not commonly heard in the mainstream media
  • Greater autonomy and local decision-making for our radio station
  • Fiscal transparency and responsibility: people, not corporate underwriters, supporting people’s radio
  • Local, diverse, multilingual, and young voices from and for our communities
  • Spanish language programming to bring progressive messages to Spanish language communities
  • Effective, participatory governance that is accountable to listener-sponsors and responsive to the diverse needs and interests of the Southern California listening community

And we have listener candidates committed to those principles

Pick up that pen now, and start filling in those tiny squares. Some of you fought the Pacifica Struggle for this moment, the chance to change KPFK with a vote instead of a lawsuit.

Our staff candidates include Rodrigo Argueta, Fernando Velazquez, Omar Burdett, and Nadia Lee Richardson.

We’re not alone. Endorsers of our principles include Yousef Abudayyeh (National Coordinator, The Free Palestine Alliance, USA*), Elahe Amani (Iranian women and human rights activist, mediator and artist), Yolanda Anguiano (LSB member*), Lydia Brazon (former iLAB Chair, former PNB Director, human rights activist), Bill Gallegos (Communities for a Better Environment*), Sherna Berger Gluck (LSB member, programmer for “Radio Intifada”*), Sundiata Griotts (African storyteller), International Action Center Los Angeles, Dedon Kamathi (programmer for “Freedom Now”*), and Hamid Khan (South Asian Network, programmer for “Beneath the Surface”*).

Did I mention Peggy Lee Kennedy (Venice Justice Committee*), L.A. County Peace and Freedom, Nativo Lopez (Mexican American Political Association*), Norma Martinez (programmer for “Informativo Pacifica”*), Elizabeth Mejia (programmer for “Insurgencia Feminina”*). Calvin E. Moss (Venice/Santa Monica Food Not Bombs*), Michael Novick (Anti-Racist Action-Los Angeles/People Against Racist Terror*), and the Puerto Rican Alliance?

Don’t let me forget Jerry Quickley (former producer and host), Victor Rodriguez (Department of Chicano and Latino Studies, CSULB*), Pedro Sanchez (programmer for “Suplemento Comunitario”*), SEIU Local 721 Latino Caucus, Jim Smith (Free Venice Beachhead*), South Central Farmers, South Central Farmers Action Fund, South Central Farmers Cooperative, Southern California Immigration Coalition, Bernard White (fired and banned program director and host from WBAI), and Tim Wise (anti-racist speaker and author)

We’re a nascent movement, the beginning of returning KPFK to its Mission, to its roots, and to its communities and to its future. We’ll be here for you after the elections too, and we hope you’ll be with us.

Leslie Radford
Delegate, KPFK Local Station Board*
Director, Pacifica Foundation National Board*

*Oganizational affiliations noted for identification purposes only.

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How Grace Aaron Came to Run Pacifica

Although the author of this is not clear, the points in the article are clearly cited.  From L.A. Indymedia.  -ed.

by Wachale Sunday, Oct. 04, 2009 at 12:51 AM

An untold chapter on the tactics used by Aaron and her CTSK to win the 2007 election at KPFK that propelled her climb to controlling Pacifica Radio.

Voted yet in the KPFK Local Station Board elections? If you haven’t, read this first. If you have, read this and then ask the KPFK Local Elections Supervisor for a replacement ballot.

In 2009, the Committee to Strengthen KPFK is trying to buy an election. In 2007, they tried a lawsuit against the Pacifica Radio Foundation.

In 2009, CTSK, led by Grace Aaron, has foregone most of the manipulations they used to win in 2009. This year, the CTSK group has shrunk and their endorsements have shriveled, so it’s resorting to the mainstay of Democratic politics: money. They’ve marshaled their friends who still have excess money to seduce witless voters with another round of costly mailers and the back page of Change Links. Whether money buys elections at the potentially, and sometimes actually, radical community radio station remains to be seen. Ballots are due in on October 15.

The 2007 CTSK leader, Grace Aaron, has stepped away from openly leading CTSK, since she’s now heading the whole Pacifica shebang, of which KPFK is but one part. She’s both Chair of the Pacifica National Board and Executive Director. Have you heard the current fund drive? The snake oil and hocus pocus are not just a transparent appeal to aging baby boomers’ lost youth, it’s Aaron’s vision of a KPFK make-over. The same pablum is being doled out across Pacifica stations.

Ever wondered why KPFK’s news is now broadcast out of Berkeley?

Aaron will term out in March, but she’s leaving in her wake the rest of the CTSK slate, led by her husband, Ken Aaron.

Grace’s rise to power began with the 2007 elections, but she first flexed her muscle in a lawsuit to squeeze one more CTSK member on to the KPFK Local Station Board. The story never made it to LA Indymedia, but the whole account is in the Local Election Supervisor’s report.

Makes you wonder what Grace and CTSK will do to Pacifica and KPFK if they don’t win this year.

Here’s the long, sordid, and revealing tale: Read more…

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From Farce to Tragedy: The New Crisis at Pacifica By Iain Boal

http://www.counterpunch.org/boal10062009.html

October 6, 2009
From Farce to Tragedy
The New Crisis at Pacifica
By IAIN BOAL

On September 17 the Governance Committee of the Pacifica National Board passed a resolution expressly designed to find out whether Amy Goodman’s Democracy Now! program is getting CIA funding through covert channels like the Ford Foundation for suppressing the “truth” about the 9/11 “over-up” The author of the resolution, Chris Condon, made it clear that he wrote a motion on funding disclosure specifically to find out “where the hell Amy Goodman’s money is coming from”.

Condon’s campaign for reelection to the KPFK Local Station Board in Los Angeles is endorsed by the current interim Executive Director of Pacifica and chair of the Pacifica National Board, Grace Aaron. Despite being thrown out of the Church of Scientology, Aaron still publicly identifies herself as “a follower of the teachings of L Ron Hubbard”.

What on earth is going on here? Listeners to the largest independent radio network in the US, whose broadcast signals are powerful enough to reach a fifth of the entire population, are no strangers to faction fights among staff and local boards, especially at the largest stations, WBAI (New York), KPFA (Berkeley), and KPFK (Los Angeles). But veterans of the now legendary 1999 crisis could be forgiven for thinking that Pacifica had safely resumed its mission of promoting understanding between peoples and individuals through peaceable dialogue. Many will be dismayed to learn that Pacifica is once again on the edge of the abyss.

In some ways it’s 1999 redux, when a faction under the leadership of Mary Frances Berry, then chair of the Pacifica National Board and former chair of the US Civil Rights Commission, staged a power grab that involved intimidation, lockouts, secret surveillance, armed guards, firings at the local stations, and a barrowload of lawsuits. The takeover triggered a grassroots campaign to save Pacifica, with its epicenter in Berkeley (a “rat’s nest”, declared Berry) but vitally dependent on the strategic sense and tactical savvy of a trio of campaigners on the East coast, Juan Gonzalez, Dan Coughlin and Denis Moynihan. The obstreperous street-level resistance came as a shock to the chair of the Board, who knew little about radio and even less about the original vision that impelled the founders of Pacifica.

Their idea of exploring the springs of human conflict through radical dialogics was born in the camps and prisons that housed conscientious objectors to World War 2. The invention of “listener sponsorship”, the Cold War rhetoric of “free speech” and the identitarian fetish of “community” all came later. Pacifica’s deeper, intertwined taproots were anarcho-syndicalism and Kierkegaardian poetic witness. NPR…not.

A history of the airwaves reveals their special attraction to junior military officers, state propagandists, authoritarians of various stripes, and people with something to sell. Many of the footsoldiers in the 1999 putsch at Pacifica did indeed have their eyes on the microphones, but there was another far larger prize now in sight, although publicly denied – the broadcasting licenses themselves. The network’s five licenses were immensely valuable in the newly deregulated media market, the result of Clinton’s Telecommunications Act of 1996. The New York license alone, with its powerful transmitter on the Empire State Building and massive earprint across a vast metropolitan area, was reckoned to be worth up to $250 million in the hot new radio market. Seize the Pacifica airwaves in order to sell them: a very neoliberal coup! Read more…

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“Informativo Pacifica” Replies to KPFK’s Interim Program Director/”Informativo Pacifica” responde al director de programacion interino de KPFK

9/15/09

By:  Fernando Velazquez

(NOTE: Spanish follows)

KPFK’s Interim Program Director Alan Minsky has taken valuable space at the station web site in this time of economic hardships to respond to criticism regarding “his decision” to change the broadcast hours for “Informativo Pacifica” from 5.30 A.M. Monday to Friday, to week nights at 10.30 P.M. Monday thru Thursday (starting September 15, 2009), to let us know that he cares deeply about the Latino community and that he respects Informtivo’s news team.

He also has taken the time “to explain” to us how important it is for his political ally Roy Tuckman to get two extra hours of air time (hours that Minsky is taking from “Informativo Pacifica” to give them to “Roy of Hollywood”), on top of the 23 he already has, to raise money for KPFK.

And to tell us that Informativo’s change in no way will have a negative effect on the program’s distribution, its audience, or the producers.  Nothing can be further from the truth.

Let’s start with the effects on its local audience.  KPFK broadcasts its signal in Southern California.

This is the home of the largest Mexican, Central and South American communities, and the largest concentration of Spanish Language speakers in the country. This Spanish speaking community goes to bed early because it needs to get up early in the morning given its work needs.  They will be the first hit, as well as Northern Mexico’s “Radio Bemba” who airs Informativo simultaneously by taking every morning the signal off the Internet.

No one disputes that there is an economic crisis in the world (according to most economists, a crisis created by the US), at KPFK and Pacifica Radio. But to strike at the Latino community by sending them to the back of Alan Minsky’s bus, to the hours when most Spanish Language speakers are sleeping, because the Los Angeles white  middle class needs to stabilize “their station” sounds a bit punitive and in line with the anti-immigrant, anti Latino times we live in. Read more…