Community Radio Heads Up to the Hill, But Needs a Push

Yeah, I'm a weekend writer but I'm going to use my free pass to post on legislative topics during the week, because this one's important. Today is a huge day for those of us interested in community radio. Back in 2000, Congress passed the Radio Broadcasting Preservation Act that put the kibosh on the issuing of new licenses for low-power FM radio stations. LPFM stations are low-watt community-based radio stations that serve local areas by providing targeted information and acting as community hubs. They're a way of injecting a bit of diversity into a local news market and can serve some of the functions that the Internet/blogs do for people that can't afford a computer or Internet access. In fact, having an LPFM station with staff who have access to one computer and high-speed broadband hook-up can greatly open up the information available in local communities that might otherwise be off the news grid.

In January of 2000, the FCC began issuing LPFM licenses for (what I believe was) the first time. The National Association of Broadcasters objected, and in response Congress called for a study that would investigate whether LPFM frequencies interfered with existing radio stations, as NAB was concerned about. The MITRE corporation did that study and found that, technically, LPFM and full-power broadcasting can live together in almost perfect harmony:

Our principal finding is that LPFM stations can safely operate three channels away from existing FPFM stations, provided that relatively modest distance separations are maintained between any LPFM station and receivers tuned to the potentially affected FPFM station. Those required separations are on the order of a few tens of meters in the best case, to slightly more than a kilometer in the worst case. The main exception to this finding involves FM translator receivers, which may require distance separations up to about 3.2 kilometers from 100-watt LPFM transmitters lying squarely in the main beams of the translators' receiving antennas. If these requirements are met, both analog and digital FPFM stations should be able to operate without significant risk of harmful third-adjacent-channel interference from LPFM.

Facts in hand, now the move is to get Congress to authorize to the FCC begin issuing LPFM licenses again. Today Mike Doyle (D-PA) and Lee Terry (R-NE) in the House and Maria Cantwell and John McCain are introducing identical legislation that would tell the FCC to get to it. This is a simple good move that can get done in this congress, and a blessed rare case of a telecom issue that's politically fairly straightforward. No bill numbers yet, but in both House and Senate it'll be called the Local Community Radio Act of 2007. Congresspeoples need to hear from their constituents that community radio is important to them, particularly those sitting on the House Energy and Commerce and Senate Commerce Committees.



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Re: Community Radio Heads Up to the Hill, But Need (none / 0)

Great article, Nancy. On a fantastic press conference today, announcing the bills, the Congressmembers were joined by the Indigo Girls, some amazing local broadcasters, advocates, and religious organizations today to talk about the impact that low power FM would have on the music industry, local community life, and on public safety. LPFM radio can and does save lives, as in the case of WQRZ-LP, the only station that stayed on the air in Bay St. Louis, MS after Hurricane Katrina, and WCTI-LP, a farmworker radio station that helped hundreds of local workers escape Hurricane Wilma by being the most relevant station around to folks who spoke Spanish as a second language.

If you want a real community radio station in your neck of the woods, please call your congressmembers and educate them today on the vital service local radio provides.

You can also sign http://www.expandlpfm.org to let your legislators know that community radio is one solution to media consolidation.

Listen to the press conference -- hosted by the amazing folks at Free Press -- here.

http://www.freepress.net/docs/lpfm_press _call.mp3
-- ----- hannah sassaman prometheusradioproject building radio stations = awesome http://www.prometheusradio.org 215-727-9620
by hannahjs on Thu Jun 21, 2007 at 01:14:58 PM EST

Glad you're sticking around (none / 0)

I'd wondered whether, with the changes here and your new gig over at Air America, and one thing and another, you might have moved on.

Glad to see you're not.


by skeptic06 on Thu Jun 21, 2007 at 01:58:27 PM EST

Re: Community Radio Heads Up to the Hill, But Need (none / 0)

I'm from a community radio station and know that there is so much energy in every community to have one, that they can exist with very small budgets and a bunch of volunteers. There is really no excuse for denying communities these airwaves, which they would then manage themselves. It is a small piece of spectrum, but it has the ability to create a virtual community center of sorts.

If congress doesn't pass this, I say we mutiny!


by sakums on Thu Jun 21, 2007 at 04:20:47 PM EST

Re: Community Radio Heads Up to the Hill, But Need (none / 0)

I helped start an LPFM and know that there is enough energy in every community to have at least one (or more) volunteer-driven radio stations.

If congress doesn't pass this, I say we mutiny!


by sakums on Thu Jun 21, 2007 at 04:25:01 PM EST

I'm with skeptic (none / 0)

Thanks for staying, and thanks for reporting on this.  


by drowsy on Thu Jun 21, 2007 at 05:17:14 PM EST

Thanks guys (none / 0)

Appreciate the kind words. This is important stuff, I think -- structural tweaks that will mean a lot in the long term. Thanks again.
by Nancy Scola on Sat Jun 23, 2007 at 01:27:46 PM EST
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