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Subject:
From:
Salvatore Scifo <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Salvatore Scifo <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 20 Mar 2012 09:47:59 +0200
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (88 lines)
Source:
http://prometheusradio.org/release-march2012

FCC Decision Opens Radio Airwaves for Communities Nationwide
New rules create opportunities for hundreds of new community radio stations

March 19, 2012

Washington, DC-- In a victory for communities nationwide, today the 
Federal Communications Commission announced that the agency will open 
the airwaves for community radio. To make room for a new wave of local 
stations, the FCC will clear a backlog of over six thousand pending 
applications for FM translators, which are repeater stations that 
rebroadcast distant radio stations. The decision will allow for the 
first new urban community radio stations in decades. (see the decision 
at 
http://transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2012/db0319/DOC-313080A1.pdf)

"Today the FCC has opened the door for communities to use their own 
local airwaves, and that will be transformative," said Brandy Doyle, 
Policy Director for the Prometheus Radio Project. "We commend the 
Commission staff for the care and diligence they have shown. We also 
wish to thank Chairman Genachowski, Commissioner McDowell, and 
particularly Commissioner Clyburn and her hardworking staff for their 
efforts on behalf of communities."

The announcement concludes the first hurdle in implementing the Local 
Community Radio Act, passed by Congress in 2010 after a decade-long 
grassroots campaign. The FCC is on track to accept applications for new 
Low Power FM (LPFM) stations nationwide as early as Fall 2012. Community 
groups are gearing up to apply for the licenses, which will be available 
only to locally-based non-profit organizations.

“For our migrant communities here in Arizona, community radio would give 
a voice to people who rarely get to speak for ourselves in the media,” 
said Carlos Garcia, Lead Organizer with Puente Arizona. "Anti-immigrant 
voices dominate the airwaves. Community radio can help us tell our own 
stories, share news and information, and get organized."

Broadcast radio remains one of the most accessible means of 
communication in the US, with 90% of Americans listening at least once a 
week.

"Radio is a great tool for reaching working people - it's free to 
listen, easy to produce, and people can often tune in on the job or 
while doing housework," said Milena Velis, Media Organizer and Educator 
with Philadelphia-based Media Mobilizing Project. “In Pennsylvania, 
we're facing big challenges, from education cuts to rural poverty to 
environmentally destructive shale drilling. We see community radio as a 
way to bring people together and create solutions from the ground up."

Low power community stations are non-commercial and cost as little as 
$10,000 to launch, putting these stations within reach of many 
communities who have limited access to other media outlets.

Hundreds of pending translator applications will be dismissed in 
Philadelphia, Phoenix, and dozens of other cities, in compliance with 
the rules released today. The FCC plan will preserve channels by 
dismissing translator applications that would preclude future community 
radio stations in certain markets where the FCC has determined that 
space for community radio will be scarce.

“We are pleased that the FCC has taken such a careful approach to 
preserving channels for community radio,” said Doyle. “And we’re 
particularly glad that the FCC has taken our recommendation to ensure 
that the frequencies set aside are in populated areas, where they are 
needed. This will make a big difference in San Antonio, Sacramento, and 
12 other mid-sized markets, where stations too far from the city would 
have reached only tumbleweeds or farmland."

The FCC had stopped processing the pending applications in response to a 
2005 petition filed by Prometheus and Media Access Project. The new 
processing plan includes several changes proposed by Prometheus to 
improve the outlook for community radio.

Also today, the FCC released a set of proposed rules for new community 
radio stations, asking for public comment on the proposals. That release 
begins the final rulemaking procedure which must be completed before the 
agency can accept applications for new stations.

The Prometheus Radio Project has been the leading advocate for low power 
community radio since 1998. Prometheus led a decade-long grassroots 
campaign to pass the bipartisan Local Community Radio Act, succeeding in 
2010. Over its history, Prometheus has supported hundreds of communities 
in licensing, building, and operating their own radio stations.

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