Intersecting regulatory structures

May 24th, 2010

For broadcasters, there can often be several different regulatory structures governing the same set of activities – which adds, of course, to the complexity of decision-making by managers and others.

I was reminded of this today when I saw this tidbit from Inside Radio (the story itself is behind a pay-wall):

AG: Talk show not contribution.

Maryland Attorney General’s office says it doesn’t consider a radio talk show a campaign contribution. WBAL, Baltimore talk host and former Republican Governor Robert Ehrlich has said he plans to remain on the air until he announces his bid in July to reclaim the governor’s office. Several Democratic groups protested his radio show, saying WBAL was giving Ehrlich an unfair advantage.

Radio stations are, during an election campaign, subject to the Equal Time rule, which requires (with certain exceptions) that stations provide time to all candidates under the same terms and conditions. The rule is codified in 47 USC 315. That rule, though, only covers ‘legally qualified candidates’ so there’s a loophole as:

Ehrlich has declared his intentions to run for governor and has started campaigning but has not yet officially filed his candidacy.

(In an added absurdity, Ehrlich actually has a campaign spokesperson, who is issuing statements about the issue that are clearly part of a campaign for office: “We were confident all along we were right in our position. And we hope now that everyone can focus on the issues that are important to Marylanders which are lower taxes and creating new jobs.”)

Those stations which hold non-commercial licenses (WBAL holds a commercial broadcast license) from the FCC are also banned, by FCC regulation, from selling airtime or airing ‘calls to action’, which largely prevents the airing of campaign ads. Further, many non-commercial stations are organized as 501 (c) 3 organizations, and so subject to IRS regulations that restrict political activities.

With this story, despite the advice from the office of the (Democratic) Attorney General that the show should not be considered a political donation to Ehrlich, we are reminded that state electoral financing rules might also affect what can, or cannot, be aired, and that the situation might differ state by state.

Incidentally, WBAL is covering the story heavily online and over the air today – together with another where Ehrlich’s non-candidacy status is actually hampering him somewhat, as supporters are being cited for zoning violations, for large (32-square foot) signs that don’t fall under the exception for election candidates. You can’t always have it both ways….

19% of US radio newsrooms still don’t do any digital editing

May 22nd, 2010

That’s the implication of this report from RTDNA/Hofstra University. And a significantly larger portion seem to not be wholly digital in their capture/production process.

Definitions matter

February 6th, 2010

EUObserver reports on internal EU Commission documents that seek to redefine palm oil plantations – “the source of one of the most destructive forms of biofuels” – as forest that “would not per se constitute a breach” of rules on sustainability. While forests are generally seen as desirable under such rules, because they are not a net contributor to global warming, and support diverse ecosystems, the definition of ‘forest’ has been tweaked in the draft rules, following intensive lobbying, in order to cover some of the activities that such rules are meant to discourage.

In Portugal, web radio gains while digital radio stalls

December 30th, 2009

More grist to the mill of those hammering home the failure of digital terrestrial radio forms, this time from a Portuguese-language article by Nair Prata in Studies in Communication:

Como acontece no Brasil, a webradio vem ganhando forc¸ a e presenc¸ a em Portugal, ao contrário do rádio digital, que apenas engatinha.

In translation, I get:

As in Brazil, webradio is gaining strength and presence in Portugal, as opposed to digital radio, which just crawls.

Given my lack of Portuguese, I’m still working my way through the rest of the article….

AFL-CIO weighs in on broadcast royalties

December 2nd, 2009

The AFL-CIO has come out in favour of the Performance Rights Act, which would introduce performance royalty fees for broadcasters in the United States.

Station start-up resources

November 22nd, 2009

Many years ago now, I sketched out notes for starting up a community radio station in Ireland, based on my experiences, and in response to queries from many people looking for assistance either with class projects, or real-life station development issues. I haven’t had time in recent years to work on the many revisions that document needs, but I am coming across more information to guide those engaged in this process. Most recently, these notes from Farm Radio International, which in turn points to many valuable resources available online. Check it out!

The trouble with virtual economies on Facebook

November 20th, 2009

There’s been a spate of interesting articles in the past few days, about scams operated by and through Farmville (and similar applications), and now Facebook clamping down on groups that ‘sell’ fans to those wishing to increase their numbers.

Audio from GEO events

November 20th, 2009

Joe Feria-Galicia has done awesome coverage of the recent GEO events, and he has created an MP3 with his raw audio:MP3

GEO wins tuition waiver security! Pickets suspended!

November 17th, 2009

In a successful 2-day strike – the first by a union local at the University of Illinois in 10-years, and one of the largest in the history of graduate unions in the US – the GEO has secured a commitment to retain tuition waivers for graduate employees. The University had previously refused to commit to retaining them for the contract period, after considering removing them for certain graduate employees earlier this Spring, as well as actually pulling them (mid-year) from undergrad assistants just a few weeks ago.

This strike, over waivers, which are a necessary element of making grad school accessible to those other than the wealthy (and, in Illinois, the well-connected), is clearly situated in a broader context of struggles over the future of public education, as recognized by Amy Goodman on today’sDemocracy Now!, where she was talking, in California, with some of those engaged in the struggle (with credit to Rich Potter of the GEO for making contact with Amy over this issue):

AMY GOODMAN: And Professor Roy, maybe you can comment on this and what is happening at the same time here at home with the state budgets, with our educational system. UC Berkeley is not the only one going through this. For example, the news from the University of Champaign-Urbana in Illinois: apparently, in this last week—let’s see if I can find the information—graduate teaching assistants at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign went on strike yesterday after the university refused to guarantee continuation of the teaching and grad assistant tuition waivers.

Strikes have many elements. There’s the ‘above the fold’ part, the most visible: the pickets, the rallies, and (in the case of the GEO) an amazing drum corps. There’s the bargaining: tedious, important in the formal process of getting an agreement that lets the strike come to an end. And then there’s so much background work. The people who planned and organized: both over the past months, and the many years of activism, work, and sacrifice that brought the union into being and made this week’s action possible, not only necessary. The people churning out press releases and materials, taking care of the administrative overhead and much more. Congratulations to my colleagues, my comrades, at the GEO, IFT/AFT 6300, for their success this week.

GEO strikes – and seeks help from YOU!

November 15th, 2009

My old grad union (still feels funny to frame it that way) is going on strike in the morning, after they failed to reach agreement with the University of Illinois. The sticking point in the end turned out to be tuition waivers – the University wanted the right to remove them from out-of-state students, something that would make graduate education unaffordable for many, and make the University far less competitive. The union had made concessions on other areas – including being amenable to a proposed raise of just 10% over three years, even though that would leave grads continuing to earn far below a living wage – but the University refused to budge on this last issue.

As GEO members head out on the picket line, the union is looking for help from supporters around the country – specifically phone calls to top administrators. The union will be meeting with administrators on Tuesday, so a successful two-day picket, coupled with calls from supporters, could just provide the momentum needed to get this thing finished. Here’s what the union has sent out: Read the rest of this entry »