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KPFA Labor forum: Speak-Out On KPFA and Labor
by DJ Rubble
Monday Sep 6th, 2010 1:14 PM
A forum was held at ILWU hall on Saturday, August 28. Candidates from three competing slates in the upcoming KPFA board elections spoke and debated on their platforms and the escalating problems at the station. KPFA is mired in financial, programming and internal management problems. I believe the labor-based "Voices For Justice Radio" slate is clearly the best choice to serve and I've posted a longer written piece in the "Independent Media" section.
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I see one faction, “Voices For Justice Radio“ (voicesforjusticeradio.org), as a clear and promising alternative to the dismal operating style of the current and past boards, while also capable of guiding management and programmers in a more productive direction. The slate is made up of Steve Zeltzer, Sureya Sayadi, Jamie Cader, and Felipe Messina.

They are running as a labor-based candidacy, including pushing strongly for a one-hour prime-time weekly labor show. They ask why KPFA won’t do this when the other three Pacifica stations have such shows. Steve Zeltzer is well known as a labor activist and broadcaster. Jaime Caldor organizes Spanish-speaking workers. Felipe Messina has been outspoken on station issues.

They have a published 11-point platform, a Program To Rebuild KPFA and Pacifica. It includes more community-based reporters with volunteer news bureaus in the South Bay, North Bay, Peninsula, Fresno and Sacramento. Re-establish the Program Council and open meetings to the public. The slate is actively opposing a planned merger of the KPFA-KPFK (Los Angeles). The merger will probably result in more centralized, rather than more localize news content, on a show that already broadcasts too many liberal reactions to mainstream newswire stories. A petition is available on their website.

They propose reorganizing the news department for more in-depth reporting, and make it available to the public. They envision a multi-media organization that uses the web and video as an integral part of the mix, with creative ways to get out and share content. They want to beef up labor, black, LGBT, and immigrant programming. They want to re-establish the Women’s and Third World Department and establish a Labor Department. They see programming established by the rank and file, bottom-up instead of top-down. They want a Pacifica station in New Orleans. The current financial problems can be eased by making the tough choices and moving towards more of a reliance on volunteers rather than too many paid staff members.

They also want strong support for the campaign to drop the charges against arrested programmer Nadra Foster. She’s still banned from the station with no due process. The information is available at voicesforjusticeradio.org.

A second faction, Independents For Community Radio (ICR for this article), which includes Tracy Rosenberg (also Director of Oakland-based Media Alliance), made sensible proposals for fiscal responsibility and broadening the listener and contributor base by broadcasting to broader communities including immigrants. Tracy describes her group as having a minority representation on the current board. Tracy was appalled at the lack of accountability for current financial mismanagement.

The third, calling themselves Concerned Listeners - Save KPFA, seem to have had or have or are close to having a majority on the last two Boards, along with management and programmer representation. This group clearly lacks any sort of forward thinking “vision”, has been a part of a plethora of current in-station problems and needs to go now. They just want more donations for more programmers and increased "professionalism" and more centrist, pro-authority politics. I was kind of put off at their behavior and lack of diplomacy, especially a man named Matthew Hallinan, along with such a narrow-focused platform.

Thei first audio speech has Voices for Community Radio candidates, Steve Zeltzer, Felipe Messina, and Jaime Cader give opening overviews on tehri platform. (5:54)
§KPFA Labor forum: Speak-Out On KPFA and Labor
by DJ Rubble Monday Sep 6th, 2010 1:15 PM
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An impassioned debate takes place concerning volunteer programmer rights and working conditions.

Concerned Listener - Save KPFA candidates Matthew Hallinan and another candidate named David make sniping remarks about things said by the other slates, all of which was polite, orderly fact-based but highly critical of the status quo. At one point Mr. Hallinan, seeming a little paranoid and beleaguered, rips into Voices For Community Radio candidate Felipe Messina for having once been ordered out of the station. Hallinan seemed to think Mr. Messina had no right to talk as a candidate; Messina described the incident - a Concerned Listener person called the police on him for refusing to leave the station after some type of political argument. The Concerned Listener candidates see no problems with the working conditions for unpaid staff, while candidates from the other two slates report major problems in this regard.

Voices For Community Radio candidates Steve Zeltzer and Felipe Messina provide closing remarks on their platform. (10:25)
§KPFA Labor forum: Speak-Out On KPFA and Labor
by DJ Rubble Monday Sep 6th, 2010 1:15 PM
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Voices For Justice Radio candidate Steve Zeltzer talks at length about his vision for the stations, getting it back to its activist reporting mission. (7:47)
§KPFA Labor forum: Speak-Out On KPFA and Labor
by DJ Rubble Monday Sep 6th, 2010 1:15 PM
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kpfarosenbergmoney.mp3 12.2MB

Independents For Community Radio (voteindyradio.org) candidate and - I think - current Board member Tracy Rosenberg speaks on the current fiscal problems at the station. About $1.4 million dollars frittered away in the past two years, including their entire $1 million dollar reserve and a grant check never deposited. Bad budgets in a poor budgeting process, with “unspecified cuts” the hundreds of thousands of dollars never implemented, and nobody really held accountable. The Concerned Listener - Save KPFA candidate and others seemed to really not want Tracy Rosenberg or her fellow candidates to talk much about this. Rosenberg is also Director of the Oakland-based Media Alliance. (6:39)
§KPFA Labor forum: Speak-Out On KPFA and Labor
by DJ Rubble Monday Sep 6th, 2010 1:15 PM
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mimirosenberg.mp3 3.3MB

WBAI's Mimi Rosenberg describes her 2009 purging at the New York-based Pacifica station, after close to four decades of activist labor programming.

KPFA had announced but not implemented the total elimination of two hard-hitting programs, "Hard Knock Radio" and "Flashpoints". I hear they are still trying to eliminate Flashpoints by "laying off" host Dennis Bernstein. They recently forced out skilled Flashpoints producer Nora Barrows-Friedman by unilaterally cutting her hours in half, making it unaffordable for her to continue working her job. Steve Zeltzer accurately described these so-called budgetary moves a "political retaliation". I see it as part of a continued dumbing-down of the political content of the network. (1:30)