Berkeley-In this past election cycle, one of the few bright spots was the strong support for lifting the minimum wage. At Pacifica Radio however, things are going in the opposite direction as indicated by an ad for an early AM part-time position at KPFT in Houston – paying $10 an hour. Continue reading $10/Hr To Work In The Media→
Berkeley– It’s a Pacifica election for Halloween. Maybe. The national board after considering a timeline developed by their elections committee, rejected the timeline, but did issue an order to unelected chair of the board/interim executive director Margy Wilkinson to hire someone to run the election by December 1st. This is not the first time the board has so instructed, but since Wilkinson voted to tell herself to make the hire, perhaps she will. Who will be hired is a mystery since the most qualified candidates Bill Crosier and Sanchez Montebello have both been ruled out, Crosier due to factional antipathy and Montebello withdrawing in anger after Wilkinson never acknowledged receiving his application. The election has many unanswered questions including how Pacifica will transition to online voting, where the money will come from to pay for it, and what seats are up for election – as 1/2 of the delegates terms expired in December of 2013 (including Wilkinson’s term) and the other 1/2 expire in December of 2015. The rejected timeline proposed a completed election by July of 2015. If the election covers all the seats, Pacifica subscribers will have to rank 18 candidates out of the 36-50 that will run in each signal area. Pacifica’s bylaws prevent delegates and directors from extending their own terms without the permission of the full membership. Continue reading Boo It’s An Election→
Gray Panthers of San Francisco 2940 16th Street, Room 200-4, San Francisco CA 94103 415-552-8800 [email protected]
Dear Quincy McCoy,
As long time supporters of KPFA, members of the San Francisco Gray Panthers are writing to tell you of our disappointment in recent management decisions at KPFA. Continue reading Letter from the Gray Panthers→
Berkeley-Pacifica’s finance committee bears the responsibility for reviewing and recommending divisional budgets for the 5 stations, national office and archives and consolidating those 7 documents into an organizational budget for the upcoming year. That task is supposed to be completed by September 30th. But a month after the end of the fiscal year, the end is nowhere in sight. Pacifica is careening into 2015 with no fiscal plan at all. Continue reading The Nonprofit Without A Budget→
Berkeley-The new corporate call center collecting pledges for Pacifica stations KPFK in Los Angeles and KPFA in Berkeley is owned by Bruce Hough, an Oregon republican who runs a Tea Party campaign advertising/fundraising business called Impact Marketing with his partner, rabid Tea Party congressman Sal Esquivel. Esquivel traveled to Arizona to stand with Michelle Malkin, the Minutemen and others in support of Arizona’s anti-immigrant law SB 1070. Hough (who regularly threatens to move his Medford-based call center Comnet to Nevada should the Oregon legislature raise taxes) and Esquivel are regularly called out for Tea Party shenanigans including funding vicious attack ads against local Democratic candidate and military veteran Jeff Scroggin. The ads were so disgusting that two out of three local Republican County commissioners refused to endorse Tea Party candidate Doug Briedenthal, whose “Friends of” committee had the same address as Hough’s Impact Marketing and paid for the mudslinging ads. Hough and Esquivel were labeled “Rogues of the Week” by the Williamette Weekly for an unethical scam to charge gulliable voters to email Congress. Hough and Esquivel also house conservative PACS (political action committees) at Impact Marketing giving aways hundreds of thousands of dollars to local and national Tea Party candidates. Each call to donate to KPFA or KPFK routes .90 cents a minute to Hough’s company or $3-5 per call. Continue reading Donating to the Tea Party and Expelling Spanish Speakers→
Berkeley-Pacifica narrowly acquired FCC permission to engage in fundraising for an outside organization – 4 days after doing it – and by accident. After happening to listen to an edition of the Sojourner Truth program on KPFK-FM in Los Angeles last weekend promising 1/2 the pledges raised to a health charity for Ebola relief in West Africa, former PNB treasurer Tracy Rosenberg sent a note to Pacifica’s FCC lawyer giving him a heads-up on the third-party fundraising and asking him to make sure KPFK would not be fined. The attorney hand-delivered a notification to the Federal Communications Commission two days later and received permission based on the relevant facts presented in his written request. Continue reading Ebola-Gate→
It is way past time to put our radio network under the leadership of people who know how to supervise the operation of radio stations. The post-coup situation cannot continue. Not for another day and not for another week.
The executive director position needs to be immediately filled with an interim director with sufficient experience not to endanger the licenses. The Pacifica National Board (PNB) has had applications for months from at least two individuals with decades of experience managing radio stations. One of them needs to be placed into the interim executive director position immediately. Continue reading Wilkinson Lies To The Federal Communications Commission→
Berkeley-The network’s controversial CFO, Raul Salvador, has not responded to last week’s revelation that he did not, in fact, recently “discover” payments to the network’s profit-sharing pension fund had not been made in 2013, but made that decision himself in a meeting with the third party administrator in the summer of 2013. And he concealed it in the last Pacifica audit which reports the $200,101 accrued for both retirement plans was paid. The whereabouts of the $92,413 said to be paid to the pension plan, but never received, is unknown. Continue reading Archives Begone→
What’s Causing Static at KPFA: Money, Power and People’s Radio
(News for a People’s World 1993 by Nick Alexander)
Berkeley-KPFA, the nation’s premier listener-sponsored radio station is in the throes of a crisis that is at once political and administrative. Both sides of the conflict accuse opponents of resisting changes needed to fulfill station founder Lew Hill’s dream to fight for the rights of the marginalized, downbeaten and voiceless elements of society. At the center of the turmoil are a dispute over organizational hierarchy and charges that KPFA’s national board of directors is trying to create a left-leaning alternative to National Public Radio” (NPR). Continue reading Wayback Machine: What’s Causing Static At KPFA (Nick Alexander)→