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Intimidation Between the Minutes
democracy isn't easy, and isn't cheap either. But the alternative at KPFA/Pacifica is a top-down station management without transparency or accountability. That, in effect, is what we've had for the last several years. The ICR, who are now the board majority, are working to change this, while the CL'ers are defending the status quo. That is what all the yelling and screaming is about.
INTIMIDATION BETWEEN THE MINUTES
--KPFA's Local Station Board meeting of March 7, 2010
by Daniel Borgström
http://www.danielborgstrom.com
Board meetings can be dull, but not the one held on March 7th. Sasha Futran was chairing, and Conn "Ringo" Hallinan spoke out of turn, interrupting Tracy Rosenberg. Sasha called him to order, and he bellowed back "YOU are out of order!"
Conn Hallinan had been board chair till last fall, when his faction, the CL'ers ("Concerned Listeners") narrowly lost their majority in the KPFA election. They were unhappy about that, and, despite being the minority, were agitating to reclaim some or perhaps even all the officer positions of the board, an agenda which might enable them to reassert their control of the station and continue their opaque, top-down style of management that has gotten KPFA into financial jeopardy. As always, the CL'ers were in lock step, taking turns presenting their case, some being nice and some nasty. A good-cop-bad-cop sort of thing. It began to look as if this had been planned out, with Conn assigned to the nasty-guy role.
The outburst was brief and discussion returned to a calmer manner. But the subject had not changed, the CL'ers continuing to take up meeting time pushing their agenda. After two or three CL'ers spoke, Sureya Sayadi defended her side, the ICR ("Independents for Community Radio"), who are the new majority on this board.
"This sounds like bullying to me," she said, referring to the CL'ers' agenda. There'd been an election, she reminded them, and saw no reason to hand the board offices back over to the CL'ers. "You guys were controlling finances--" and she was interrupted by Conn Hallinan, his second outburst that day.
"Call the fucking member to order!" Conn shouted into the mike.
"Conn! Conn!" said Sasha. "I'm going to call YOU to order. Okay?"
"You can TRY!" Conn yelled back at Sasha, going on to accuse Sureya of abusive, personal insults.
"What was personal about that?' Sasha asked, and, not getting a satisfactory answer, repeated her question. "WHAT was personal about that?"
Conn left his seat at the far end of the table and advanced pugilistically towards the chair, pointing his finger at her and shouting as he approached.
"Sit! Sit! Sit!" Sasha ordered. In her other life she's a dog trainer, and at this moment she looked to be on automatic pilot. "Do I need to use positive reinforcement dog training on you? Sit!"
Conn did not sit. He continued his menacing advance, his voice resounding off the walls and filling the room with apprehension. Finally, with only a narrow table between them, Conn halted and stood there shouting at Sasha, point blank. Sureya had engaged in a personal attack, he boomed out, waving his finger.
"That was NOT personal!" Sasha told him, but Conn kept yelling. "Who did [Sureya] name?" Sasha demanded to know.
Watching from the back of the room, I sat there stunned, feeling I should do something. Maybe the rest were as immobilized as I was. The scene might have lasted thirty seconds, but time slows down at critical moments. After an eternity, someone in the audience had the presence of mind to call out, "Conn, you're being video taped!" I think it was Richard Phelps.
"WHO did she name?" Sasha repeated her question to Conn.
Pointing now at Andrea Prichett, Conn barked, "ASK HER!" And with that, Conn turned about and marched back to his seat, leaving us all to wonder what he meant by telling the Chair to ask Andrea.
There was a flurry of comments and expressions of relief. Joe Wanzala and Akio Tanaka murmured words of comfort and reassurance to Sureya. Brian Edwards-Tiekert strode across the room to Conn, put his arm across his shoulder and said a few words, then returned to his seat. There was a brief lull after the storm. It was still only 20 minutes into the meeting.
Then Chandra Hauptman took up a mike and said in a slow, calm, measured tone: "If a member cannot conduct themselves in an orderly manner they should leave. They should be asked to leave."
"Sureya should leave!" yelled a CL'er. I think it was Diane Enriquez.
"Sureya should leave!" chorused another CL'er.
"Okay folks, that's enough!" Sasha told the CL'ers. "THAT IS ENOUGH!"
Sureya was still holding a mike in her hand. "Someone should take a picture of you," she said to Conn.
Sasha turned to Sureya. "There are photos. It's all videotaped."
And indeed it was. It's there for the record. In Sureya Sayadi's speech that Conn interrupted, there are no personal attacks, and, the video shows Conn advancing on the chair.
"Ringo" is Conn's nickname, probably after a prize fighter by that name, considering his father's preoccupation with boxing. All the Hallinan brothers have macho nicknames, like Dynamite, Kayo, and Butch, and they've always prided themselves on being tough guys. Now in their 60's and 70's, it appears the brothers still haven't outgrown that aspect of their youthful image. It seems to be part of how they get their way, their Plan B for use when having a board majority isn't an available option.
I do not for a minute believe that Conn "Ringo" Hallinan was the least bit out of control that day. I think it was part of his act, a conscious strategy. He finished the scene by yelling "Ask her!"--a bizarre and puzzling exit statement. It looked to me like a clever way of tossing the ball into someone else's court. That's how intimidation works.
And it did work. Conn was not formally reprimanded and there was not even a motion made to that effect. There was a brief moment of quiet as people caught their collective breath. Then the CL'ers started in once more with their agenda, and though they didn't manage to push it all the way through that day, they succeeded in getting it on the schedule for future meetings.
How can the CL'ers get away with stuff like that? It's because Conn Hallinan is more than just a barroom brawler, he's also a prominent member of the progressive community, scion of a famous and wealthy family. He's been a newspaper editor and currently writes articles on foreign policy matters. Conn has considerable status, and when a person with status blows his top and yells and screams and makes a threatening advance, it's often excused and taken for granted that he must have a very legitimate reason for doing so.
I thought of calling this dramatic episode "The Barroom Brawler vs. the Poodle Dog Trainer," but such a title could obscure the real theme, which goes far beyond questions of who is the biggest, the toughest, the meanest, the nicest, and the most Roberts Rules abiding of the players. The real story in this scene is the struggle between two opposing views of how to run KPFA/Pacifica:
One is the ICR and Peoples Radio view that there be financial transparency and accountability--woefully lacking during the years of KPFA/Pacifica's growing financial crisis. To remedy that and also to create more community-building media, we need participation by station staff and listeners through board elections and through bodies such as the Unpaid Staff Organization and the Program Council. These structures, already mandated by the Pacifica bylaws, have been consistently opposed and often thwarted by the CL'ers, who believe a tiny group of station managers should make all major decisions by themselves.
The CL'ers assert that KPFA elections are expensive and cumbersome. But to the extent that this is true, it has been hugely exacerbated by station management's playing an obstructionist role in every election. While it's true that democracy isn't easy, and isn't cheap either, the alternative is a top-down station management without transparency or accountability. That, in effect, is what we've had for the last several years. The ICR, who are now the board majority, are working to change this, while the CL'ers are defending the status quo. That is what all the yelling and screaming is about.
DANIEL BORGSTRÖM
http://www.danielborgstrom.com
*******
NOTES:
AUDIO from KPFA's LSB of march 7, 2010
http://pacificana.org/public/files/KPFA/Media/2010/20100307-1112-KpfaLsb.mp3
SUREYA SAYADI's talk transcribed from the audio:
"I mean this sounds like bulling to me.
Because there's law where you have vote.
When you vote you can't cry about it.
It's just like 'We didn't win.' You know?
Because in the 3 years I've been here you guys did every single thing even about how to go to Fresno, Not to go to Fresno.
We don't want to go back to that.
That's why we are being so bad.
Because you guys were controlling finances--" (interrupted by Conn Hallinan)
For more information:
http://www.danielborgstrom.com
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Not CL
Mon, Apr 12, 2010 11:17AM
Not What I Remember, But I am Not "Tired"
Mon, Apr 12, 2010 12:55AM
What about your outbursts Mr. Pheleps ?
Sun, Apr 11, 2010 6:31PM
We must be objective in our reporting if we believe in media democracy at KPFA/Pacifica
Sun, Apr 11, 2010 9:10AM
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