United for Community Radio

What we stand for



United for Community Radio (UCR)

Platform for the KPFA Local Station Board (LSB) election-2016


KPFA and Pacifica are irreplaceable, strategic and transformative resources for amplifying the voices of millions who are overlooked, marginalized or silenced by corporate media in the face of police militarization, racism; and housing, health, water, economic, educational, and environmental depredation. We forge a vital radio station and network by balancing often difficult news reports with programming that heals and facilitates human connections.


as UCR members and LSB representatives we work to:

1. Insure Relevant Programming: through a listener and staff based program council with decision making power. Increase community-sourced, local, daily, prime-time programming and podcasts-addressing attacks on immigrants and people of color and discrimination based on race, nationality, gender, sexual orientation, age and disability. Assert a clear anti-war perspective.

2. Decrease pro-corporate perspective: Replace reading of mainstream media newsfeeds with attributed independent news sources including increased Pacifica network program sharing. Counter the influence of corporate political parties' monopoly on opinion.

3. Join the global media revolution:
- - - - Make KPFA radio segments searchable on the internet.
- - - - Provide current audio and video segments, podcasts and livestreaming on the KPFA website and social media resources.

4. Support all staff: Improve access to resources and training for unpaid staff and provide all staff, paid and unpaid, the right to unionize.

5. Responsible finances: Provide a transparent and sustainable budget that aligns spending with actual income: No corporate underwriting or advertising.

6. Strengthen the Pacifica Network: Participate in a network-wide accountability process to financially stabilize and democratize Pacifica and KPFA. We are committed to preserving the 5 stations, the national archives and our relationships with over 200 affiliates worldwide.


Here are the UCR (
UNITED FOR COMMUNITY RADIO) candidates. Please vote for all of them. And, for more information, please visit the websites at the bottom of this page.

(Voting begins in August)



Marilla Argüelles — former President of Home Care Workers' Chapter SEIU, Local 616, editor of "Extracts from Pelican Bay," former KPFA Labor Collective member.

T.M. Scruggs — Executive Producer at TheRealNews.com, ethnomusicologist, Professor Emeritus, University of Iowa, volunteer for community radio stations in U.S., Nicaragua and Venezuela.

Kris Stewart — independent journalist and videographer.

Akio Tanaka — Green Party activist, former Local Station Board member.

Ramsés Teón-Nichols — SEIU 1021 Vice-President, current Local Station Board member.

LaTasha Warmsley — playwright and career counselor.

Carol G Wolfley — KPFA Community Advisory Board member, mediator/facilitator, retired Berkeley teacher, member of Berkeley Post Office Defenders, Transition Berkeley. Open Circle and Occupy Oakland.

Tom Voorhees — early-on KPFA volunteer transmitter engineer, 2014 volunteer of the year, National Federation of Community Broadcasters.


*** *** ***
*** *** ***

for updates, reports & essays on KPFA/Pacifica,
please visit these websites:

UNITED FOR COMMUNITY RADIO

PACIFICA IN EXILE

ANN GARRISON, A KPFA REPORTER

LORDS & LADIES vs. the PEASANTS at KPFA


*** *** ***

KPFA 94.1 FM is one of five stations of the Pacifica radio network which are located in major cities across the country. The other stations are WBAI 99.5 in New York, WPFW 89.3 in Washington DC, KPFT 90.1 in Houston, and KPFK 90.7 in Los Angeles. There are also about 160 affiliate stations.




Vote for the UCR -- United for Community Radio

























Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Brian's email of 2005

" how do we make our enemies own the problems that are to come?" -- Brian Edwards-Tiekert



The e-mail below was found at the station in September 2005. It has been acknowledged as real by the author. I have contacted in person or by e-mail everyone but one on that strategy group to ask them if they were just recipients of an e-mail that discussed “
dismantling the LSB” and other interesting topics or were they active participants and none of them have denied active involvement.

This e-mail was sent shortly after the Local Station Board (LSB) voted down a their motion to fire the General Manager for sexual harassment. It was voted down 15-5. Four of the five votes for it were in this e-mail group*. There was NO evidence of sexual harassment found after two separate investigations, one was done by their own Dan Siegel. It was an attempt to fire an African-American General Manager that wouldn’t toe their line. Their pushing for this unjust firing caused them to lose the majority on the LSB, thus their need for a "strategic retreat." This e-mail gives one a view of what these folks really believe in! Sort of like a Pentagon Paper.
--Richard Phelps, former LSB Chair.


From:"Brian Edwards-Tiekert"
Yahoo! DomainKeys has confirmed that this message was sent by gmail.com. Learn more
To:"LemlemTekle" , "Bonnie Simmons" ,
LisaRothman@kpfa.org
CC:"Sasha Lilley" , "LemlemTekle" ,
mawu_mama37@yahoo.com, "Amelia Gonzalez-Garcia" , Rain
Geesler" , "Sherry Gendelman" , "Gary
Niederhoff"
Subject:Re: budget
Date:Thu, 1 Sep 2005 20:58:28 -0700


I'm up for coffee Saturday—Lisa and I can still meet Tuesday afternoon. Also, we need a general strategy session. How about Tuesday night?

Issues include:

How should we be handling the expiration of the union contract—is a strike in order, or is it a really terrible idea?

What's the best way to deal with these layoffs?

Coming up with, and presenting, an alternative budget.

Getting the Roy issue to the national board.

Propping up staff morale.

Strategic retreat on the LSB—how do we make our enemies own the problems that are to come? Alternatively, should we be recalling LSB members/dismantling the LSB? (Emphasis added.)

Dealing with the grievances underway.

Building community support—formation of a labor-community coalition.

Brian Edwards-Tiekert
Staff Representative, Local Station Board
KPFA 94.1FM
1929 Martin Luther King Jr. Way
Berkeley CA 94704



*** *** ***
*** *** ***

Updates, reports & essays about KPFA & Pacifica Foundation Radio at
UNITED FOR COMMUNITY RADIO


KPFA 94.1 FM is one of five stations of the Pacifica radio network which are located in major cities across the country. The other stations are WBAI 99.5 in New York, WPFW 89.3 in Washington DC, KPFT 90.1 in Houston, and KPFK 90.7 in Los Angeles. There are also about 160 affiliate stations.







.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

"Please don't ask any more questions about . . ."



Not all infiltrators are gun-waving cops such as the CHP officer photographed at a recent protest. Here's a story from the OWS movement, of a person who was active in Occupy Oakland and also sat on the KPFA board. I suspected she was an infiltrator. So at a board meeting I asked her about her associations, and here's how it went.


Between the Minutes
at KPFA's Local Station Board
on December 1, 2012

by Daniel Borgström

For seven years I've been attending KPFA's Local Station Board meetings and, on occasion, writing Between the Minutes, a series in which I take up some brief incident which might dramatize, bring to life, or even humanize an otherwise tedious and lengthy board meeting.

Dramatic moments can be subtle, but not lacking, since the board consists of two opposing camps. One of these is the grassroots group,
United for Community Radio, which I support. The other is "SaveKPFA," the status quo group with ties to the Democratic Party, and whose membership includes Pamela Drake. Pam is an activist who came to Occupy Oakland last year, then found a job with Mayor Jean Quan who was sending police to attack Occupiers.

Pam's activities looked like a conflict of interest. So I posted an article, "
The Mayor Quan Connection at Occupy Oakland," in which I suggested that Pam's SaveKPFA colleagues might care to investigate her involvement and give us a report. Two weeks passed; so far no response. They didn't seem inclined to talk about it; just the same, I felt it might be worth asking them.

The KPFA Local Station Board seemed a logical place to present such a question, but is it proper to ask someone if she's a point person for the mayor in dealing with Occupy? This was a very delicate matter, and deserved to be presented in a way that would be directly relevant to the KPFA board itself. KPFA/Pacifica bylaws has a rule stating that anyone who's a member of government can't be on the board at the same time.

So I attended the December 1st meeting, placed my name on the list for Public Comments, and took a seat in the audience waiting for the session to start. About 20 board members sat around a conglomeration of tables configured into a U-shape. On the left were eight members of United for Community Radio. And on the right were ten or eleven members of "SaveKPFA." Among them was Pam Drake, only two seats from the end of the table, quite close to the audience section. Another of her SaveKPFA colleagues, Jack Kurzweil, sat at the very end, closest to me. He is a famously disagreeable person who seems to take himself very seriously.

The meeting began, the agenda was approved, and after a couple other preliminaries it was time for Public Comments. I was second to speak, and Margy Wilkinson called my name. Margy was the chair, a member of SaveKPFA. I stepped over to the table and picked up the mic.

"This is uncomfortable," I said, and it really was uncomfortable, but I felt it was important to bring it up. I took a deep breath and began: "I understand that we have some rule about being on the LSB and being in government at the same time. Now I understand that Pamela Drake, on the LSB, also works for the mayor, I would like to know in what capacity, what the particulars are."

Pam was sitting only eight or ten feet away from me. I looked at her. "I read this from your own website, and from various newspapers. That's where I got this information." I paused, glanced around at the others and continued. "I'm at Occupy Oakland and Pam is also at Occupy Oakland. And --"

Jack Kurzweil cut in, "That is a personal attack!" he shouted.

"I --" I tried to speak, but Jack was shouting me down. "The speaker is attacking an LSB member!" he yelled. Margy called for order, but Jack went on. Board members are not supposed to respond to speakers, and certainly not interrupt. But this had happened so often that I'd almost come to expect it. Anyway, I had the mic in my hand while all Jack had was his loud obnoxious voice, so I said, into the mic, "I'm raising a question! I'm raising a question!"

Margy called for order, saying. "I fully intend to allow Pam to respond when Daniel is done. Thank you!"

Momentarily brought into line, Jack went silent, and I continued.

"This is a question I'd like to raise. As I was saying, I'm at Occupy Oakland. I understand that Pam was quite active there, and that her job with the mayor, whatever it may be. . . I'd like to hear what it is. I think it was as a coordinator of a committee which you define as advising the mayor on various local issues. And I wonder if that includes strategies for suppressing Occupy." I paused and added, "I mean that's a personal concern with me."

"Okay!" Margy cut in, "Okay!"

I started to tell about what happened on January 28th, the day police mass arrested 400 of us, myself included. "I had a gun pointed at me! I would like to know --"

"Okay! That's enough," she said. "I understand. Do you have anything else?" She was laughing nervously; she seemed terribly uncomfortable. "I understand," she said again. "Please don't ask any more questions about Pam. I'm going to ask Pam if she wants to respond. But did you have anything else you want to say?"

This was about the first time a chair ever cut a speaker off during Public Comments at a KPFA board meeting. Public Comments is a forum where people get two or three minutes to address the board. Speakers can say anything on any subject, and though it should be about KPFA, it doesn't have to be. It doesn't have to be nice, polite, or laudatory either. In the past, Margy had consistently respected my right to speak. Today was a first. But I had said enough for now, and I said. "Thank you for listening to my question."

I passed the mic to Pam, who said, "Thank you, Daniel." Pam said that very sweetly.

Margy spoke, "I would like to point out that Pam Drake is--" she paused. "Go ahead Pam. You may respond."

"I do not work for the mayor and that's all there is to it," Pam said calmly. "And I do go to Occupy because I've been very involved with that too. And that's it."

Not working for the mayor? Despite what she had said in her own bio
about advising the mayor? Pam's denial surprised me. And her present involvement with Occupy? What could that mean? With all that echoing back and forth in my mind, I hardly listened to the following speaker who spoke for the next three minutes, then lay down the mic, which was retrieved by Jack.

"I have a motion," he said.

"Go ahead Jack," Margy told him.

"I move that Daniel Borgström be prohibited from addressing this KPFA Local Station Board for the next year."

Huh? I sensed a huge collective gasp from the entire room. This was truly a groundbreaking first. During all the seven years I've been attending KPFA's board meetings, I'd never before heard a motion to ban anyone from Public Comments.

"Do I hear a second to that motion?" Margy said.

For a long instant, I held my breath. The SaveKPFA crowd had a majority and could pass it. Too bad. No, not too bad -- it'd be just great! That would really make my point.

Then I heard laughter. The United for Community Radio people across the aisle from Jack were laughing, as was the woman sitting next to me. Tears seemed about to start rolling down her cheeks. I realized that I was laughing too.

"Okay! I'm asking for a second to that motion." It was Margy again. But from the SaveKPFA side of the aisle there was no response, only embarrassed silence.

"The motion dies for the lack of a second," Margy announced. "We're now ready for announcements."


AUDIO of the KPFA Local Station Board meeting of Dec 1, 2012
The above segment is about 20 minutes into the audio.


working for, coordinating for, advising, or what?

It seems beyond dispute that Pamela Drake coordinated a committee which worked on behalf of Mayor Jean Quan. The original purpose of that committee was to oppose an attempt to recall the mayor. If it was a political action committee rather than a part of the mayor's administration, Pam's coordinator role may not have violated the KPFA/Pacifica rule which prohibits a member of government from being on the board.

And while Mayor Jean Quan was not popular, the recall effort against her did not have much traction among progressives. Not even Occupy endorsed the recall. So Pam Drake's opposition to the recall was not the issue.

However, according to Pam's own bio, her job included more than just stopping the recall. So the question is: did the "
many local issues" on which she advised the mayor include Occupy?

DANIEL BORGSTRÖM

*** *** ***
*** *** ***

Newspapers & Websites


Numerous articles in the SF Chronicle and the East Bay Express identify Pamela Drake as coordinator of a committee called "Stand with Oakland." Here are a couple of them.

SF Chronicle Sunday, March 18, 2012
Stand With Oakland coordinator Pam Drake

East Bay Express March 19, 2012
Pamela Drake, a coordinator for the group

The "Full Biography for Pamela A. Drake" (6/5/2012) listing her as a candidate to be on the Democratic Party County Central Committee of Alameda County, states that Pamela "
was staff to the effort to elect Jean Quan as Oakland's first woman mayor. She continues to serve as a member of Stand with Oakland, a committee which advises the Mayor on many local issues."

Pam Drake
announced her break with Occupy Oakland in an article she posted on her own website, dated Jan. 26, 2012


*** *** ***
*** *** ***

for updates, reports & essays on KPFA/Pacifica,
please visit these websites:

UNITED FOR COMMUNITY RADIO

PACIFICA IN EXILE

ANN GARRISON, A KPFA REPORTER

LORDS & LADIES vs. the PEASANTS at KPFA


*** *** ***

KPFA 94.1 FM is one of five stations of the Pacifica radio network which are located in major cities across the country. The other stations are WBAI 99.5 in New York, WPFW 89.3 in Washington DC, KPFT 90.1 in Houston, and KPFK 90.7 in Los Angeles. There are also about 160 affiliate stations.




Vote for the UCR -- United for Community Radio







































Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Dan Siegel and WBAI


Dan Siegel is running for mayor of Oakland, and he looks like a progressive. However, his history with the Pacifica Radio network (which include KPFA & WBAI) shows that he can be destructive to progressive organizations.

An employee of the Siegel & Yee law firm, Jose Luis Fuentes, now represents Dan Siegel on KPFA's Local Station Board and is player in the the attempt to fire Pacifica's Executive Director Summer Reese.



Siegel does not begin his account of WBAI's travails until 2009 -- I wonder why?

(WBAI is KPFA's Pacifica sister-station in New York)


by Mitchel Cohen, Chair, WBAI Local Station Board
November 14, 2012

Dan Siegel should be proposing positive ways to expand KPFA's membership -- which has greatly diminished during his faction's control of the local board -- and stop scapegoating WBAI.

Siegel does not begin his account of WBAI's travails until 2009 -- I wonder why? It was, after all, WBAI's mismanagement up until the middle of 2009 that was the problem, and it was Siegel and his faction on the Pacifica National Board and national office who hired the destroyers and promoted their policies that were and still are undermining the network.

We at WBAI are still digging ourselves out from under an amazing amount of mis-management, terrible "planning", very real physical violence, and theft at WBAI that had been hammering us while Siegel was Chief Counsel and interim Executive Director at Pacifica.

In 2009, we succeeded, finally, in replacing the old Siegel-backed crew at WBAI that had caused so much damage to Pacifica. The following year, the new management was able to begin reversing the serious problems they'd inherited.

They'd inherited the following:

- at least $65,000 in essential equipment that WBAI had purchased had been "diverted" to private individuals, one of whom was a relative of the former Siegel-supported management. That was covered-up by one of the very officials Siegel continues to defend in his letter! Please recall that until 2009, Siegel's faction controlled the Pacifica National Board. He personally -- with the support of his Board -- pulled every trick in the book to block the Directors' inspections from looking into the $65,000 in stolen equipment, after which the PNB decided to sweep the whole matter under the carpet.

- more than 7,000 listeners had ordered and PAID FOR premiums over 2007 and 2008, but those orders had never been fulfilled (though the station accepted their money).

- the premiums department at WBAI was a wreck. When I personally went to investigate, I found literally thousands of CDs strewn, unlabeled, all over the floors, desks, and radiators! WBAI lost thousands of members as a result.

- there was more than $800,000 in pledges at WBAI each year that were left "sitting on the table" and never collected. Instead of pushing his managers to collect those funds, Siegel made excuses for their incompetence. Since we installed the new management, we have at long last increased the fulfillment rate income by over 10 percent (around $200,000 per year).

- thousands of dollars in cash had been appropriated and "misused" by a sticky-fingered manager supported by Siegel, and awarded to management's friends.

- violence at the station was rampant; reports of physical abuse occurred on a daily basis.

- Management purchased premiums from its friends, as a kickback operation to its faction's supporters.

- Management allotted prime office space for no rent to its friends doing private business from WBAI's studios.

- it was Dan Siegel's faction on the National Board that imposed the renewal of the onerous rental lease on WBAI, and which many of us opposed -- a lease that Siegel now incredibly blames on us! (Studio rent is $380,000 per year; antenna rent atop the Empire State Building is approaching $500,000 this year.)

All of these and a lot more occurred prior to 2009, when Siegel and his faction ruled Pacifica, which is why he begins his "analysis" only after that date. It was only when we finally were able to put into place new management at WBAI (not solidified until 2010-11) that each of these problems began to be seriously addressed and rectified.

Let me give one more example. Hundreds of WBAI listener-members and staff did not receive ballots in the 2007 election, when Dan Siegel was Chief Counsel for Pacifica and its interim Executive Director. We brought this repeatedly to Siegel's attention. Instead of simply ordering Pacifica to send us ballots, Siegel and the Board he controlled at the time refused to send them. We had to go to Court; we won a Temporary Restraining Order that, among other things, directed Pacifica to send us ballots.

Instead of following the Court's order, however, Siegel and Pacifica continued to play games with members' right to vote. He mired the Network deeper and deeper into an expense of more than $175,000 to Pacifica's attorneys, just to justify not sending us ballots! He lost, but Pacifica was left holding the bill.

Why were Siegel and Pacifica at the time acting so viciously, incurring huge expenses that the network had to pay? At the same time Pacifica and KPFA were pleading poverty, the management Siegel and his faction controlled at KPFA and supervised by KPFA's then-treasurer Brian Edwards-Tiekert (BET for short) "forgot" to deposit a $375,000 check, while claiming "there's no money!" (In fact, BET, Siegel and the KPFA GM met with the donor when the check was given to KPFA. Do you think they really just "forgot" about such a large sum?)

The new management teams at WBAI and Pacifica inherited that huge mess from the previous administration; it has taken several years to clean it up, and we're still not fully out of it yet. But we're way ahead of where we used to be. WBAI management has been excellent in addressing (and improving) at least that much.

But, no thanks go to Brian Edwards-Tiekert -- a KPFA paid programmer -- who proposed a few years ago that WBAI and the other Pacifica stations drastically cut staff. The National Board -- at that time controlled by Siegel and his faction -- voted to implement Brian Edwards-Tiekert's proposal. WBAI was forced to cut 35%(!) of its staff, bringing it down to around 1/2 the salaries of KPFA and crippling the station.

The very cuts Brian proposed were the cuts that he went to the barricades over when they affected his own job, instead of other people's.

So it is very strange that, all of a sudden, Dan Siegel "discovers" that WBAI is in trouble and "draining the network". It was the mismanagement of those supported by Siegel's faction that set those wheels in motion and that the new management is trying to reverse. We are slowly succeeding in doing so.

OF COURSE WBAI has to move to cheaper studios -- I've been one of those most vociferous about that. Still .... If WBAI had the same very low costs for studio space as KPFA or KPFK, we'd be swimming in funds. WBAI now takes in around the same in contributions as KPFA. Looked at another way, why is it that KPFA is in such serious straits under the Siegel faction, since it has around $900,000 less in overhead expenses than WBAI?

I believe that the best chance for improving KPFA lies in saving -- not breaking up -- the Pacifica network. And so I urge you to reject Siegel's blame-game, and vote for the United for Community Radio slate in the elections to the local station board.

MITCHEL COHEN
Chair, WBAI Local Station Board (for ID only)
www.MitchelCohen.com


*** *** ***
*** *** ***

for updates, reports & essays on KPFA/Pacifica,
please visit these websites:

UNITED FOR COMMUNITY RADIO

PACIFICA IN EXILE

ANN GARRISON, A KPFA REPORTER

LORDS & LADIES vs. the PEASANTS at KPFA


*** *** ***

KPFA 94.1 FM is one of five stations of the Pacifica radio network which are located in major cities across the country. The other stations are WBAI 99.5 in New York, WPFW 89.3 in Washington DC, KPFT 90.1 in Houston, and KPFK 90.7 in Los Angeles. There are also about 160 affiliate stations.




Vote for the UCR -- United for Community Radio






































Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Dan Siegel, Fiction Writer



The following article by Tracy Rosenberg was originally posted on CounterPunch, with the title Dan Siegel and the Pacifica Foundation: The Battle for Clarity


by Tracy Rosenberg
November 9, 2012

In his Nov 5th Counterpunch op-ed titled “
The Battle for Pacifica”, Oakland attorney Dan Siegel exhibits a severe case of amnesia. While chronicling a presumed series of deeds he claims occurred since 2009, Mr. Siegel mentions nothing at all that happened prior to 2009.

As if Pacifica were a tabula rasa born shiny and new at the exact moment Mr. Siegel and his cronies lost their 6 year grip on the foundation’s national board of directors.

Siegel was the Pacifica attorney from 2006-2009, and at all times a powerful player in internal affairs and prime financial backer of the Concerned Listeners group that now calls itself “
SaveKPFA.” It is disingenuous for Siegel to pretend to a lack of culpability for some of the unfortunate circumstances he presents.

The Internet, at last report, existed well before 2009, so one must ask why in the decade prior no technology upgrades were made by the group Siegel now wishes to return to leadership. Who does he think failed to invest money — when Pacifica had money to invest — in digital technology throughout the 2000's?

Well …. um….. himself?

In fact, his crew didn’t even maintain the radio transmitters, which in 2012, failed in both Houston and Los Angeles.

As the legal adviser to the board of directors in 2006, Siegel had every opportunity to point out the unaffordability of the Empire State building lease for WBAI-FM’s transmitter, which was signed in 2006 for 20 years with rates that increase by 15% a year. Instead, he recommended that the board sign it, and sign it they did.

Or perhaps the WBAI lease at Wall Street which was signed repeatedly by him and his cronies in what the then-minority knew even then was financial insanity? That’s not even mentioning a totally nutty balloon loan proposed in 2008 that would have endangered foundation buildings and licenses and was averted by one solitary vote from the contingent he ridiculously insults.

This kind of raw hypocrisy is the problem.

Siegel fails to mention his role in actively supporting a number of managers in extracting significant legal settlements from Pacifica after termination, greatly exacerbating the financial chickens that came home to roost in 2009-2010. Siegel served as an attorney for fired KPFK manager Eva Georgia and testified on behalf of Lonnie Hicks after he was let go as the CFO. These legal shenanigans are his responsibility and his alone. They’re usually defined as malpractice.

Siegel’s Save KPFA contingent described unpaid workers at KPFA-FM as “clowns” on Michael Krasny’s Forum radio program, needlessly insulting the workers who create 75% of the program content and raise more than 1/2 the operational funds.

The point is, the last thing Pacifica needs is more of the same. Economic pressures are what they are. Like Pacifica, San Francisco’s public radio station KALW-FM also has a going concern alert on their audit. It’s endemic in this age of financial catastrophe. Very few of us besides wealthy lawyers are a going concern these days.

Siegel is so desperate to keep control of Berkeley’s KPFA-FM that he ran a lawyer from his own firm, Siegel and Yee, for the KPFA board in 2010 and now proposes to add a third lawyer from Siegel and Yee, Jose Fuentes Roman, to the local board. This will make more than 10% of the local board his current and former employees. Does Siegel and Yee think KPFA-FM is their personal property?

Reject this nonsense and vote
United for Community Radio with a slate of fresh candidates who are not a part of the Siegel machine:

Pacifica will thank you. Its survival depends on not repeating the mistakes of the past decade.


TRACY ROSENBERG is the executive director of Media Alliance and a current local board member at KPFA-94.1 FM in Berkeley.


The above article by Tracy Rosenberg was originally posted on CounterPunch, with the title Dan Siegel and the Pacifica Foundation: The Battle for Clarity






















Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

without due process

(Note: " Save KPFA" is the most current name of the group which has also called itself the "Concerned Listeners" (CL) and "KPFA Forward.")

by Richard Phelps, former Chair KPFA Local Station Board
June 21, 2012

The
Concerned Listener majority on the KPFA Local Station Board practices tyranny of the majority just like the Republican Congress. The CL censured Tracy Rosenberg without due process and when called on their wrongful conduct they continued to defy logic and fair play. (See the entire story below. But first Margy Wilkinson's latest lie to our listeners.)

Then to top it off Margy Wilkinson lied to the listeners during her June 29th debate with Tracy on the air on KPFA regarding the Recall.

Margy stated on the air (I have a recording of it) that the reason she ruled that a censure was NOT discipline was that in Robert's Rules of Order a censure is defined as a "warning". Despite the fact that a "warning" would be the first level of discipline, NOWHERE in RRO is there a statement saying that a censure is a warning. You can find the word censure in RRO at pages 120, 131, 333, 436, and 642. It is discussed as a response to someone doing something improper. Legislatures censure members now and then and everyone KNOWS that it is punishment for wrong doing. The Senate censured Joe McCarthy, something Margy and her father were cheering along with all Americans that believe in due process, which McCarthy denied to many. What happened to Margy such that she is now denying due process? Obviously, her sectarian groups desire for power and control over KPFA/Pacifica have become more important than principles like due process. Thus we should not trust her or her allies.

So Margy Wilkinson lied to KPFA listeners/voter, to cover her and her slim majority's tyrannical denial of simple due process to Tracy Rosenberg. Margy and her group, which included three lawyers and a journalism professor, who all knew the truth and voted for power over due process, were in a hurry to recall Tracy and didn't want to go through the due process procedures to properly censure Tracy, notice and a chance to prepare a defense. Shortly after the May meeting referenced below they issued their recall petition with mention of Tracy Rosenberg being censured. The details follow:


At the April, 2011 LSB meeting I was absent due to a family emergency. The Concerned Listener majority on the LSB passed a motion to censure Tracy Rosenberg for conduct outside of an LSB meeting. The procedural rules that our LSB must follow require any discipline for conduct outside a meeting requires reasonable notice for a hearing/trial where the person charged will be able to produce witnesses and present evidence in her defense. Tracy was not provided with this due process and was ambushed at the meeting.

At the May 2011 LSB meeting I made a Point of Order challenging their censure of Tracy. The first response was Conn Hallinan giving me the finger. After some delay their Chair Margy Wilkinson allowed me to speak. I laid out the rules, even quoting some, and explained that they needed to withdraw the censure and give Tracy a hearing/trial with fair notice so she could prepare her defense. Their Chair ruled that my Point of Order was overruled since a censure is NOT discipline. I was shocked but on reflection not surprised that their chair would do this.

When I was chair of the LSB I went out of my way to be fair to all. LSB meetings should be a level playing field for discussion and debate on how to make things at the station better.

On the vote to uphold the chair's ruling the CLers, in their sectarian tradition, voted in lock step and supported the chair's illogical and self-serving denial of due process. Shortly there after out came the Petition to Recall Tracy Rosenberg which included that Tracy had been censured by the KPFA LSB. I guess the CLers didn't want to delay their recall petition since they knew they would have ignored any actual evidence that Tracy may present as they did the evidence I presented on the due process for Tracy issue.

Perhaps the saddest thing about this was that NONE of the CLers seemed to have any problem (conscience) with this obviously wrong ruling!

What kind of progressive doesn't believe in due process? How are we going to build a movement for a more just society when some among the movement use the same corporate tactics, win at all cost, that they claim to be against? The answer is that we won't succeed unless we demonstrate to the 99% that we have principles like due process, truth being our guide, and fair play in all our disputes. How we win in internal movement disputes is often just as important as winning and sometime more important.

We are what we do, not what we say we believe in. Fighting for justice and fair play in Oakland, Washington DC or anywhere in the world has limited value for building a more just world if we don't practice what we preach with each other!!

RICHARD PHELPS, former Chair KPFA Local Station Board
June 21, 2012

P.S. As some of you know I have some political differences with Tracy Rosenberg regarding KPFA, Pacifica and progressive principles and I am still against the recall because it is dishonest and wrong.


Stop the KPFA Recall.org

*** *** ***
*** *** ***

Updates, reports & essays about KPFA & Pacifica Foundation Radio at
UNITED FOR COMMUNITY RADIO


KPFA 94.1 FM is one of five stations of the Pacifica radio network which are located in major cities across the country. The other stations are WBAI 99.5 in New York, WPFW 89.3 in Washington DC, KPFT 90.1 in Houston, and KPFK 90.7 in Los Angeles. There are also about 160 affiliate stations.



The original 1993 Save KPFA group were outraged and objected strenuously. But the CL'ers are still using their new ill-gotten name.















Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

A coup? or what? at Pacifica Radio

Summer Reese, the Executive Director of Pacifica Radio, was suddenly fired on March 13th. What is going on here?


Questions

by Bill Crosier, former PNB vice-chair and representative from KPFT, 90.1 FM Houston
March 16, 2014


The manner in which the majority of the Pacifica Nation Board (PNB) has been ramming through actions lately, disregarding process and democratic procedures and their fiduciary duties, and culminating with their vote to suddenly terminate the Executive Director Thursday night after she successfully avoided yet another lawsuit (by paying the rest of the severance for laid-off WBAI employees), has me wondering about their leadership and why they were elected by the new majority faction on the PNB. Would any of you on these lists like to help guess at the answers to these questions:

Why were the three people on the PNB with perhaps the most questionable credentials elected as officers? Are these the kinds of people we want in leadership positions for Pacifica?


Here are some specific questions about the officers:

* Wasn't Margy Wilkinson admonished by a court for neglecting her fiduciary duties by helping her so-called "Save KPFA" organization to collect and hold hostage pledges that were intended for her station KPFA?

* Why is Ms. Wilkinson calling herself "Chair" of the PNB, when there is a clear challenge to the legitimacy of the chair election (thus making her more of a chair pro tem), as the ballots were not tabulated in accordance with the election instructions?

* Why are she and the others of her faction delaying a re-do of the chair election?

* Is it true what I've hear about Cerene Roberts, who was elected Secretary of the PNB, that she has been banned from her station (WBAI) by several different managers over the years for violence, assaults, and threats of violence? This is not very seemly for a Pacifican. Also, why has she not produced any minutes of any of the meetings of the PNB since the new board members were seated and elected her as secretary? I count eight days of public meetings (including four at the in-person meeting in DC), and I haven't seen any minutes for any of them.

* Why did Tony Norman, representative from WPFW, tell the PNB in January, when running for the vice chair position on the PNB, that he had resigned from his elected position on the DC Advisory Board to the Neighborhood Commissioner? A check by other board members found he did not resign until they asked the ANC about this on Mar. 12. Is he (and the other officers) not familiar with the Pacifica Bylaws requirements that say "A Director shall be deemed to have resigned the position of Director if s/he becomes a candidate for public office or accepts a political appointment during his or her term as a Director", and which further clarifies that this provision applies to any "person who holds any elected or appointed public office at any level of government -- federal, state, or local -- or is a candidate for such office". Why would he have said he had resigned from his elected position on the ANC when he had not done so, and that it's clear he should never have been eligible to be on his LSB nor PNB after his ANC election?


Here are some more general questions for Pacifica's Rogue Officers' Corps:

* Is it true that they pushed to re-hire the CFO who was let go at the end of his probationary period, after failing to provide adequate financial reports and oversight of financial matters?

* Is it true that some of these financial matters include the failure of the KPFA Business Manager to reconcile KPFA's books since Sep. 2012, thus delaying yet again another audit?

* Why did the CFO fail to get that done?

* Is embezzlement or other financial malfeasance going on at KPFA that they're trying to cover up, or just padding of the payroll? Without reconciled books, it's difficult to even do an audit, much less look for whatever people may be trying to hide. Is there any reasonable excuse why it would take so long to get the books in order?


And some more questions specifically about the meeting last Thursday, March 13th:

* Why was there such an extreme rush to terminate Pacifica's Executive Director?

* Is it true that even for members of the PNB, that no notice was given for the motion to terminate her? Isn't this a gross violation of Pacifica's Bylaws and Roberts Rules?

* Is it true that even in executive session, there was no reason given to terminate her?

* Why was no discussion and debate allowed on such an important issue, that involves hundreds of thousands of dollars of liability to Pacifica?

* I'm told that potentially, over a million dollars could be at stake because of possible loss of CPB funds. Why was discussion not allowed on such critical matters that were relevant to the termination?

* Why did the PNB leadership repeatedly reject calls for having legal and HR expertise available (not necessarily present through the entire meetings) to advise and answer questions about such important personnel and liability issues? Why would they not even allow questions to be submitted for an HR attorney to answer before the next meeting (if they did not want an attorney present for the entire meeting)?

I've seen some strange things in Pacifica governance, but I'm appalled at what I've seen the current PNB leadership and their followers do recently.


My biggest question is:

With the mad rush to ignore the Pacifica Bylaws and California law, and to terminate the ED with no notice and no reasons given, and with talk from some Directors about sacrificing WBAI to keep from having to sell the buildings and other property of Pacifica stations and to allow deficit spending at those other stations, what's next?

It's pretty scary to think about.

Feel free to forward and re-post.


BILL CROSIER, former PNB vice-chair and representative from KPFT kpft (at) crosierbiomed.com

The Pacifica Radio Network has Five Stations
KPFT 90.1 FM is the Pacifica station in Houston, Texas

*** *** ***
*** *** ***

Updates, reports & essays about KPFA & Pacifica Foundation Radio at
UNITED FOR COMMUNITY RADIO


KPFA 94.1 FM is one of five stations of the Pacifica radio network which are located in major cities across the country. The other stations are WBAI 99.5 in New York, WPFW 89.3 in Washington DC, KPFT 90.1 in Houston, and KPFK 90.7 in Los Angeles. There are also about 160 affiliate stations.













Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

KPFA & Pacifica

a strategic asset for social movements

Occupy Oakland & the KPFA board election

by Daniel Borgström
August 27, 2012

KPFA and the Pacifica radio network are a strategic asset for grassroots movements challenging the status quo. It has given Occupy some very good coverage. However, this cannot be taken for granted, because this radio station and network are under attack (from within). There is now an election going on for the KPFA board which could determine the future of this radio station and the Pacifica network.

KPFA, at 94.1 FM, is the local station here in Northern California. Pacifica is the parent organization; it has stations in five major cities. It also has over a hundred affiliated stations. In short, this is a nationwide radio network. Since the Occupy Movement has been nationwide, we can see the strategic importance of keeping the Pacifica network intact. However, there are some who want to break up the network; a group calling itself "
Save KPFA" has been pushing to separate KPFA from Pacifica. That's a bad idea, because if the network were broken up, the stations would likely fall into the hands of centrist or even rightwing broadcasting companies. A breakup must be prevented; this is one of the main issues in the upcoming board election.

In the KPFA election, 9 board members will be chosen. There are two competing alliances with totally different (and in my opinion irreconcilable) visions for KPFA's future. In a nutshell, the situation is comparable to that of Occupy Oakland vs. the Alameda County Labor Council bureaucrats -- who for a while seemed to be our natural allies, but ended up opposing Occupy and lining up with Mayor Jean Quan and the Democratic Party. The Democratic Party has undoubtedly done some good, but should keep its hands off of KPFA.

We may remember that last fall, almost from day one, the Democratic Party set out to co-opt Occupy, to turn it into the Democrats' equivalent of the Tea Party. As soon as tents appeared in the Plaza, Mayor Jean Quan and the Oakland City Council (all Democrats) made a major bid to co-opt Occupy Oakland. They were actually very nice to Occupy at first, and it was only after the General Assembly rejected their advances that the Democrats sent police to attack us.

The same struggle has been going on at KPFA. The difference being that whereas the General Assembly decided within the short space of about two days that it didn't want to carry water for the Democrats, KPFA has spent two decades on this question, and is still in the process of making up its collective mind.

KPFA's board consists of 24 members -- slightly over half are aligned with the pro-Democrat labor bureaucracy, and several of this faction, which calls itself "
Save KPFA," are members of MoveOn.org and Democratic Party clubs. Pamela Drake of "SaveKPFA" openly works for Mayor Jean Quan. They are also the group that has been attempting to do a recall on Tracy Rosenberg, a highly effective KPFA board member and advocate for media democracy. If the "Save KPFA" group wins out in this struggle, KPFA's programming will most certainly be unfriendly to Occupy and other grassroots movements. Occupy will NOT receive good coverage.

Opposing the pro-Democrat faction is an alliance (including Henry Norr, David Welsh, Stan Woods among others) which is friendly to Occupy. Most of its members have taken part in Occupy Oakland's actions. This group is "United for Community Radio."

That is the KPFA situation in a nutshell; for more details, please see other articles at this website, and also at
Stop the KPFA Recall.org and Votecommunityradio.org

THINGS YOU CAN DO:

--Become a KPFA subscriber and vote in the upcoming board election. The membership deadline has been EXTENDED to September 13th.

--Attend KPFA board meetings; they're monthly, and most are held in Berkeley.

--Read up on the issues and the current history of KPFA at the above websites.

--Share Facebook posts about "United for Community Radio."


TO BECOME A VOTING MEMBER of KPFA, a $25 subscription must be delivered to the station

KPFA Radio Station, 94.1 FM
1929 Martin Luther King Jr Way
Berkeley CA 94704
(One block north of University Ave.)
(510) 848.6767



*** *** ***
*** *** ***

Updates, reports & essays about KPFA & Pacifica Foundation Radio at
UNITED FOR COMMUNITY RADIO


KPFA 94.1 FM is one of five stations of the Pacifica radio network which are located in major cities across the country. The other stations are WBAI 99.5 in New York, WPFW 89.3 in Washington DC, KPFT 90.1 in Houston, and KPFK 90.7 in Los Angeles. There are also about 160 affiliate stations.

















Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Stop the KPFA Recall!

Let's keep Tracy Rosenberg


AUDIO of the On-Air Live Debate, Friday, June 29th, at 1 PM, between Tracy Rosenberg and recall proponent Margy Wilkinson. If you missed it, you can listen in KPFA Archives by clicking here


Most staff probably would NOT have a job at KPFA today had Pacifica's Executive Director Arlene Engelhardt not stepped up in the Fall of 2010 to do what was needed to avoid bankruptcy -- lay off some staff to stop 4 years of the hemorrhaging of money. Tracy Rosenberg, along with the rest of the Pacifica National Board, unanimously supported her. Tracy is targeted with abuse for her responsible stance, but all these people deserve a resounding "Thank You!" Internal fighting at KPFA is destructive to our station and to our culture as a whole. The KPFA listeners expect KPFA staff and our elected board representatives to learn to agree to disagree and to work things out civilly -- without resorting to character assassination, lies, and vitriol. We expect a culture of collaboration and respect where constructive work can be done, even when times are hard and hard decisions must be made.

Send a strong message to the people behind this recall effort -- Enough! Stop it!

Vote NO on the KPFA recall



Who spent 6-10 thousand dollars on one mailer for a recall before it even began?

A group called Save KPFA, not to be confused with the Save KPFA of 1993 -1999 that fought for the democratization of Pacifica so it could not be run or sold by a small self-selecting group of national board members. This group does not support a democratically run station and network.


Is the recall because KPFA is in trouble?

No. After some staff cuts, the only possible way to lower expenditures, KPFA is moving out of a million and a half dollar loss to solvency and a balanced budget. Listener support remains about the same.


Isn't Pacifica, or Arlene Engelhardt, meddling in KPFA affairs?

No. Pacifica and its Executive Director are democratically chosen by the network's 5 stations and have the task of overseeing the stations. They have preserved the network and, just last year, helped pull KPFA from near bankruptcy. In a desperate situation, the ED, Arlene Engelhardt had to make the necessary layoffs that KPFA was told to make 3 years before and didn't, as all the other 4 stations and Pacifica itself did. Normally KPFA and the other stations are independent in day-to-day operations.


Did Tracy Rosenberg participate in illegal and retaliatory layoffs?

No. She was not involved in the lay-offs. She is a local and national board member, chairperson of the Pacifica Finance Committee, and serving as a volunteer and doing her job to make sound finance and policy decisions. The layoffs themselves were done in the way mandated by the CWA union contract.


So why a recall?

It's a factional fight. What is now the SaveKPFA/KPFAworker faction have always wanted to have complete control of the station. They don't want to deal with input from community, unpaid staff and or listeners who want KPFA to be managed democratically and with more emphasis on fair community media practices.

We hope that listeners will take the time to consider the facts and decide for themselves. Those promoting the recall are relying on you seeing their names and following them without looking at the rebuttal to their accusations.


Really, just a Factional Fight?

Think about these facts you may not have heard:

* As KPFA's budget has been going up and income has been going down over the last four years, some people took voluntary layoffs, one person lost her job.

* KPFA went from a loss of over a million and a half dollars to a balanced budget.

* A popular but expensive program was replaced by a new program which cost nothing.

* Pacifica defended itself against a number of lawsuits brought by Save KPFA and its supporters that were judged to be without merit by the National Labor Relations Board, costing Pacifica and KPFA approximately $80,000 dollars.

There are decisions you might agree with or not, but they are not issues to recall a board member over, who is not individually responsible for any of these decisions. Are you, as a member of KPFA interested in delving into these controversies? Or is Save KPFA relying on you making a decision based only on their partisan positions? This recall is being done to advance the interests of one faction within the KPFA community just prior to a board election.


For more information on the particulars of the recall charges, and their rebuttals, see


Stop the KPFA Recall.org

United for Community Radio

Indybay article


Who is Tracy Rosenberg?

As Executive Director of Media Alliance, Tracy Rosenberg has built an effective protest and lobbying organization with deep connections in the non-profit and grassroots communities. She is highly regarded as an influential and devoted defender of community radio around the nation. Locally, her work with Common Frequency has helped start low power stations around the area. As the Chair of the Pacifica National Board Finance Committee, it has been an almost impossible task to work with all 5 stations to bring their expenditures in line with their incomes. She has accomplished more in this last year than had been done in the previous 4 years, when SaveKPFA and its allies were in the majority.


Still don't know how to vote? If you DON'T KNOW, VOTE NO!



These charges on the Save KPFA mailer are bogus!

-- purged KPFA's biggest fundraiser and most listened-to local program (The Morning Show), causing morning pledges to drop by more than half and putting the station's fragile finances at risk

*KPFA's financial performance improved by $500,000 in the last 12 months.


-- conducted illegal, retaliatory layoffs

*Not according to the National Labor Relations Board. It dismissed a claim that the layoffs were in violation of the union contract and found it without merit.


-- wasted more than $80,000 of listener money on an anti-union law firm

* Save KPFA filed 5 complaints at the National Labor Relations Board. All have been dismissed or withdrawn. Pacifica initiated none of these complaints or costs. Zero.


-- diverted workers' retirement contributions for other purposes

*The problem started in 2005, under a different director and CFO and years before Rosenberg served on any local or national board. Nothing to do with her whatsoever. Engelhardt and the National Board authorized a seven-year correction which is underway.


-- slapped gag rules on KPFA's staff

*Not according to the NLRB. The complaint of gag rules was dismissed and found to be without merit.


-- illegally barred KPFA's elected representatives from taking their seats on Pacifica's Board.

*Dan Siegel stated his position as a legal advisor to Jean Quan was not a political appointment although it was seen as such by the local media. Siegel then resigned from the position he argued in court he didn't have due to a political conflict of interest. Pacifica's By-laws clearly prohibit anyone with a political office from holding any office in station or Pacifica governance.



These are all trumped up charges by a partisan minority that wants to send yet ANOTHER General Manager and/or Program Director, Executive Director and Chief Financial Officer packing and hasn't been able to.


For more information on the particulars of the recall charges, and their rebuttals, see


Stop the KPFA Recall.org

Indybay article


*** *** ***
*** *** ***

Updates, reports & essays about KPFA & Pacifica Foundation Radio at
UNITED FOR COMMUNITY RADIO


KPFA 94.1 FM is one of five stations of the Pacifica radio network which are located in major cities across the country. The other stations are WBAI 99.5 in New York, WPFW 89.3 in Washington DC, KPFT 90.1 in Houston, and KPFK 90.7 in Los Angeles. There are also about 160 affiliate stations.


























Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Civil Suit

The case of SaveKPFA's competing fund drive

-- SaveKPFA members attempt to avoid liability for disloyalty denied by the Court of Appeal --

by Richard Phelps, former Chair KPFA LSB
September 7, 2012

Dan Siegel, Conn Hallinan, Margy Wilkinson and Mal Burnstein, elected members of Pacifica governance, all organized and supported a fund drive competing with KPFA's Winter 2010/2011 fund drive. All four were sued for breach of their duty of loyalty. They asked the trial court to dismiss the suit against them, and the trial court said no. They appealed, and the Court of Appeal affirmed the trial court denial. Siegel and Burnstein are lawyers and had to know that competing was illegal.

In December 2010, and continuing for some months,
Save KPFA did a fund drive competing with KPFA’s fund drive. They were asking listeners to pledge to their fund to bring back the Morning Show. Daniel Siegel, Conn Hallinan, Mal Burnstein and Margy Wilkinson, all elected members of Pacifica governance, signed the letter on the Save KPFA web site asking people to pledge to their fund while KPFA was doing its winter fund drive. The SaveKPFA letter said that “If Pacifica does the right thing….” The money would be given to KPFA. It was an attempt to leverage management outside the democratic processes in the bylaws by diverting listener pledges to SaveKPFA’s political goals.

It is well established law that members of corporate governance cannot compete with their corporation. I filed a shareholders suit against these four with Daniel Borgstrom as the plaintiff. With Siegel’s law firm representing them they asked the trial court to dismiss plaintiff’s suit, and the trial court denied their motion. They appealed. On August 29, 2012 we had oral argument. One of the first questions asked by one of the three Appellate Justices, to SaveKPFA’s attorney, was “Shouldn’t your clients have resigned if they wanted to compete?” On August 31, 2012 the Court Of Appeal decision came down. The trial court's denial of their motion to strike plaintiff's complaint was AFFIRMED!

We now go back to a trial court to litigate the case and go to trial if these four
Save KPFA folks won't settle. We are willing to settle with them separately or as a group.

We are seeking damages for Pacifica, including punitive damages, which could be a lot of money for Pacifica.

RICHARD PHELPS
September 7, 2012

*** *** ***
*** *** ***


Court of Appeal Decision


IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION THREE

DANIEL BORGSTROM,
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
MARGY WILKINSON et al.,
Defendants and Appellants.

A132296
(Alameda County Super. Ct. No. RG11555942)


INTRODUCTION

Plaintiff Daniel Borgstrom, a listener-sponsor member of the nonprofit radio station KPFA 94.1, filed this shareholder’s derivative lawsuit alleging defendants Margy Wilkinson, Conn Hallinan, Daniel Siegel, and Malcolm Burnstein breached a fiduciary duty of undivided loyalty owed to both KPFA and its owner, the Pacifica Foundation (Pacifica), by organizing a competing fundraiser meant to leverage Pacifica into reviving a recently eliminated radio program while maintaining positions as elected members of the KPFA Local Station Board (LSB). Defendants subsequently filed a special motion to strike the complaint under California Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16, also known as an anti-SLAPP (strategic lawsuit against public participation) motion. In support of the motion, defendants contend that their fundraising efforts were protected activities in connection with an issue of public interest. The trial court denied defendant’s motion finding that defendants failed to satisfy their burden on the first prong of the statute because the fundraising activity was “merely incidental” to the overall gravamen of plaintiff’s complaint. The defendants timely appealed the denial of their motion to strike. We conclude that the trial court erred in its determination that defendants’ fundraising activities were “merely incidental” to the overall gravamen of the cause of action. To the contrary, plaintiff’s claim “arises from” defendants’ protected activity. Nevertheless, because we conclude that plaintiff has demonstrated a probability of prevailing on the claim, we affirm the trial court’s denial of defendants’ motion.


FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Plaintiff filed this shareholder’s derivative suit in January 2011. The allegations in the complaint are as follows: KPFA 94.1 FM is a nonprofit Bay Area radio station owned and operated by Pacifica. Pacifica is a national charitable nonprofit foundation that owns five total radio stations. Pacifica’s corporate structure enables the national Board of Directors to delegate specific duties and responsibilities to an LSB at each of their five stations to oversee local matters. Pacifica and their LSB’s are governed by the amended and restated bylaws of the Pacifica Foundation (bylaws).

The complaint further alleges that in November 2010, Pacifica terminated KPFA’s popular “Morning Show” and terminated several KPFA employees due to financial problems. In December 2010, KPFA held a five day on-air fundraiser in order to raise revenue lost from KPFA mismanagement. The station continued to ask for donations on-air following the fundraiser per its standard practice. At the same time, defendants initiated and participated in a competing campaign to raise money under the name “Save KPFA.” “Save KPFA” encouraged KPFA listeners to donate to the competing fundraiser instead of directly to KPFA, with the stated goal to raise $80,000 in order to bring back the terminated employees and revive the “Morning Show.” Pacifica’s Board of Directors did not authorize the “Save KPFA” fundraiser. Members of the Pacifica Board related to plaintiff that, due to financial constraints, Pacifica could not take the action against defendants themselves. Pacifica, however, is not opposed to the shareholder’s suit.

The complaint states two causes of action. First, plaintiff alleges defendants breached their fiduciary duty of undivided loyalty owed to KPFA and Pacifica by creating “Save KPFA” and participating in the competing fundraiser. Second, plaintiff alleges defendants’ competing fundraiser amounted to intentional interference with Pacifica and KPFA’s prospective economic advantage. In late January 2011, plaintiff dismissed the second cause of action, leaving only a single cause of action for breach of the fiduciary duty of undivided loyalty.

Plaintiff requested compensatory damages, interest lost on damages, punitive damages for defendants’ malicious conduct, recovery of costs due to the suit, and any further relief the court deemed proper.

In February 2011, defendants filed a motion to strike the complaint under section 425.16. Defendants supported this motion by contending that (1) the anti-SLAPP statute applied because plaintiff’s complaint arose from defendants’ protected activity in connection with an issue of public interest, and (2) plaintiff could not show a probability of prevailing on its claim because plaintiff failed to follow the proper procedures for instigating the suit and the suit would likely fail on the merits.

On June 1, 2011 the trial court determined that the defendants failed to satisfy the first prong of the SLAPP statute. The trial court’s order states, in pertinent part: “Defendants have failed to make the threshold showing that the challenged allegations arise from activity that is protected under CCP § 425.16 [subd.] (b)(1) and (e). Although there may be allegations in this cause of action that constitute protected activity such as nonprofit fundraising, such activity as described appears “merely incidental” to the overall gravamen of the [c]omplaint alleging unprotected activity in the form of intentional breach of loyalty.” On June 13, 2011 defendants timely appealed the denial of their motion to strike the claim pursuant to section 904.1, subdivision (a)(13).


DISCUSSION

A. Applicable Standards of Law

Resolving an anti-SLAPP motion is “[a] two-step process. First, the court decides whether the defendant has made a threshold showing that the challenged cause of action is one arising from protected activity. The moving defendant’s burden is to demonstrate that the act or acts of which the plaintiff complains were taken ‘in furtherance of the [defendant]’s right of petition or free speech under the United States or California Constitution in connection with a public issue,’ as defined in the statute. (§ 425.16, subd. (b)(1).) If the court finds such a showing has been made [by defendant], it then determines whether the plaintiff has demonstrated a probability of prevailing on the claim. . . .” (Equilon Enterprises v. Consumer Cause, Inc. (2002) 29 Cal.4th 53, 67.)

An appeal from an order granting or denying a motion to strike is reviewed on a de novo basis. (Overhill Farms, Inc. v. Lopez, (2010) 190 Cal.App.4th 1248, 1258.) The court must consider the pleadings, and supporting and opposing affidavits upon which the liability or defense is based. (Id.) In addition, where the trial court ruled against defendants on prong one, we may proceed to evaluate the merits of the remaining issues on prong two since they are subject to independent review. (Roberts v. Los Angeles County Bar Assn. (2003) 105 Cal.App.4th 604, 615-616; See generally Wallace v. McCubbin (2011) 196 Cal.App.4th 1169, 1195 [an appellate court may “remand the matter to the trial court to conduct the second-prong analysis”] (Wallace).)


B. Analysis

Defendants contend the trial court erred in its determination that plaintiff’s claim did not “arise from” protected activity. Defendants further contend that plaintiff failed to establish a probability of prevailing on the merits of the claim. Thus, defendants request that we reverse the trial court’s order denying the motion. We discuss each of defendants’ arguments more fully below.


1. Plaintiff’s Claim “Arises From” Defendants’ Protected Activity

Defendants contend plaintiff’s claim “arises from” protected activities—namely their “Save KPFA” fundraising drive. Plaintiff argues the trial court correctly determined the protected activities are “merely incidental” to the overall gravamen or thrust of the complaint. We agree with defendants on this point.

In assessing whether a claim “arises from” protected activities or if those activities are “merely incidental” to the claim, the focus of the inquiry “is whether the plaintiff’s cause of action itself was based on an act in furtherance of the defendant’s right of petition or free speech.” (City of Cotati v. Cashman, (2002) 29 Cal.4th 69, 78 (City of Cotati), emphasis added.) To prevail on the first prong of the anti-SLAPP analysis, defendant must show “that the act underlying the plaintiff’s cause fits one of the categories spelled out in section 425.16, subdivision (e) . . . . [Citation]” (Id. emphasis added.) City of Cotati explained the focus here is on the “activity or facts [that] underlie the City’s cause of action . . .” (Id. at p. 79.) In Navellier v. Sletten (2002) 29 Cal.4th 82 (Navellier), the California Supreme Court reiterated that, when evaluating the first prong, the “anti-SLAPP statute’s definitional focus is not the form of the plaintiff’s cause of action but, rather, the defendant’s activity that gives rise to his or her asserted liability—and whether that activity constitutes protected speech or petitioning.” (Id. at p. 92.)

Likewise, for anti-SLAPP purposes, the gravamen of a complaint is “defined by the acts on which liability is based, not some philosophical thrust or legal essence of the cause of action.” (Wallace, supra, 196 Cal.App.4th at p. 1190.) Thus, as stated by the Wallace court, “an alleged act is incidental to a claim . . . only if the act is not alleged to be the basis of the liability.” (Wallace, supra, 196 Cal.App.4th at p. 1183; see also Haight Ashbury Free Clinics, Inc. v. Happening House Ventures (2010) 184 Cal.App.4th 1539, 1550 [holding that whether a cause of action is subject to a motion to strike turns on whether the gravamen of the cause of action targets protected activity].) Peregrine Funding, Inc. v. Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP (2005) 133 Cal.App.4th 658 (Peregrine) explained that in assessing the first prong of the anti-SLAPP motion, an appellate court must “examine the specific acts of wrongdoing plaintiffs allege . . .” in order to determine if plaintiff’s claim is “based in significant part . . .” on defendants’ protected activity. (Id. at pp. 671, 675.)

Applying these legal standards here, it’s apparent the gravamen of the complaint is completely intertwined with defendants’ protected activity. In plaintiff’s complaint, the “Save KPFA” fundraiser alone is alleged to have caused the economic harm to Pacifica, meaning plaintiff asserted the fundraiser as the sole basis of defendants’ liability. In other words, the fundraising activity did not trigger the cause of action; it is instead the fundamental basis for the filing of the complaint itself. (Cashman, supra, 29 Cal.4th at p. 80.) Accordingly, defendants have satisfied their burden by demonstrating that plaintiff’s cause of action “arises from” the protected activity and that activity is not “merely incidental” to the allegations in the cause of action.


2. Plaintiff has Demonstrated a Probability of Prevailing on the Claim

Having concluded that plaintiff’s claim arises from defendants’ protected fundraising activity, we turn our attention to the second prong of the SLAPP analysis, whether plaintiff demonstrated a probability of prevailing on his breach of fiduciary duty claim. Plaintiff asserts that the LSB members owe a fiduciary duty of undivided loyalty to Pacifica. Defendants respond by contending that, as “nominal” board members of KPFA, they owe no duty to Pacifica. In addition, they contend the LSB has no power to control the management of the local station, the budget, or programming, and thus cannot be said to have a legally recognized fiduciary relationship with its owner, Pacifica. Both parties rely upon the bylaws of the Pacifica Foundation in support of their contentions.

“In order to establish a probability of prevailing on the claim (§ 425.16, subd. (b)(1)), a plaintiff responding to an anti-SLAPP motion must ‘ “state[ ] and substantiate[ ] a legally sufficient claim.” ’ [Citation.] Put another way, the plaintiff “must demonstrate that the complaint is both legally sufficient and supported by a sufficient prima facie showing of facts to sustain a favorable judgment if the evidence submitted by the plaintiff is credited.” [Citations.] In deciding the question of potential merit, the trial court considers the pleadings and evidentiary submissions of both the plaintiff and the defendant (§ 425.16, subd. (b)(2)); though the court does not weigh the credibility or comparative probative strength of competing evidence, it should grant the motion if, as a matter of law, the defendant’s evidence supporting the motion defeats the plaintiff’s attempt to establish evidentiary support for the claim. [Citation.]” (Wilson v. Parker, Covert & Chidester, (2002) 28 Cal.4th 811, 821.) In order for plaintiff to prevail, he “must produce admissible evidence from which a trier of fact could find in the plaintiff’s favor, as to every element the plaintiff needs to prove at trial and at least one element of any applicable affirmative defense.” (Wallace, supra, 196 Cal.App.4th at p. 1206.) In conducting our assessment of prevailing on the merits, we must be mindful, however, that “[p]recisely because the statute (1) permits early intervention in lawsuits alleging unmeritorious causes of action that implicate free speech concerns, and (2) limits opportunity to conduct discovery, the plaintiff’s burden of establishing a probability of prevailing is not high.” (Overstock.com, Inc. v. Gradient Analytics, Inc., (2007) 151 Cal.App.4th 688, 699.)

The elements of a breach of the fiduciary duty of undivided loyalty are: (1) a fiduciary relationship between plaintiff and defendants; (2) the defendants knowingly acted against plaintiff’s interests in connection with a transaction; (3) the plaintiff did not give informed consent to defendant’s conduct; (4) the plaintiff was harmed; and (5) the defendants’ conduct was a substantial factor in causing harm. (CACI No. 4102.)

According to the second prong evaluation requirements of Wallace, plaintiff initially has the burden of establishing a probability of prevailing as to each element of the cause of action. (Wallace, supra, 196 Cal.App.4th at p. 1206.) Initially, plaintiff must establish a probability that the LSB members here owe a fiduciary duty to Pacifica. California law defines a fiduciary relationship as “ ‘any relation existing between parties to a transaction wherein one of the parties is in duty bound to act with the utmost good faith for the benefit of the other party. Such a relation ordinarily arises where a confidence is reposed by one person in the integrity of another, and in such a relation the party in whom the confidence is reposed, if he voluntarily accepts or assumes to accept the confidence, can take no advantage from his acts relating to the interest of the other party without the latter’s knowledge or consent . . . .’ ”] (Wolf v. Superior Court (2003) 107 Cal.App.4th 25, 29.)

In the context of corporate structure and officer-corporation relationships, an officer owes a fiduciary duty to the corporation as a matter of law when that officer exercises some discretionary authority in the management of the corporation. (GAB Business Services, Inc. v. Lindsey & Newsom Claim Services, Inc. (2000) 83 Cal.App.4th 409, 420 (GAB), disapproved of on other grounds in Reeves v. Hanlon (2004) 33 Cal.4th 1140, 1148.) However, fact-finding is still required to determine “[w]hether a particular officer participates in management.” (GAB, supra, 83 Cal.App.4th at p. 421.) The GAB court explained that “in most cases this test will be easily met. And, as in all legally recognized fiduciary relationships, once this factual prerequisite is established, the law imposes a fiduciary duty.” (Ibid.) In GAB, the plaintiff established that the defendant, a former high-ranking officer of GAB Business Services, participated in some management activities while at GAB. The court explained that, despite defendant lacking the authority to take unilateral actions such as hiring or firing, the threshold of mere participation was easily met and therefore the officer had a fiduciary duty to the company. (Id. at p. 422.)

Here, the record supports a finding that plaintiff has a probability of prevailing on the fiduciary duty element of the claim. The introductory paragraph to article seven, section three of the bylaws states that “[e]ach LSB, acting as a standing committee of the Foundation’s Board of Directors, shall have the following powers, duties and responsibilities related to its specific radio station, under the direction and supervision of the Foundation’s Board of Directors.” (Bylaws, art. 7, § 3, emphasis added.) These duties include reviewing and approving the station’s budget, screening and selecting a pool of candidates for both the General Manager and Program Director positions, and initiating the process to fire the General Manager. (Id. at paragraphs A, B, D, and E.) In addition, paragraph M requires the LSB’s “[t]o exercise all of its powers and duties with care, loyalty, diligence and sound business judgment consistent with the manner in which those terms are generally defined under applicable California law.” (Bylaws, art. 7, § 3, par. M.)

If plaintiff can establish that defendants exercised the powers granted to them in the bylaws, specifically in paragraphs A, B, D, and E, then he could establish defendants had a fiduciary duty to Pacifica and KPFA under paragraph M. As GAB explained, an officer need not have unilateral authority over certain actions, such as hiring and firing of employees, in order for a fiduciary duty to be imposed as a matter of law because the question of participation in management is a question of fact. (GAB, supra, 83 Cal.App.4th at p. 422.) Defendants’ argument that LSB members are nothing more than “nominal” officers with no management authority is not supported by any of the pleadings or evidence they submitted. To the contrary, plaintiff has presented competent evidence which establishes defendants likely owe a fiduciary duty of loyalty to Pacifica.

In addition, the record amply supports a finding that plaintiff is likely to prevail on each of the elements necessary to establish his breach of fiduciary duty claim. In regards to the second element, the record supports a finding that defendants knowingly initiated and supported the fundraiser to resuscitate a program Pacifica already cancelled. The third element, which requires a lack of consent given for defendants’ conduct, is likewise met. Declarations submitted by plaintiff explain that no one from the Pacifica corporate governance gave informed consent to defendant LSB members participating in the “Save KPFA” fundraiser. Finally, the “Save KPFA” fundraiser was a substantial factor in causing actual harm to Pacifica in that defendants raised over $61,000 in contributions, funds that were diverted from KPFA’s own fundraiser. Plaintiff therefore has demonstrated a probability of prevailing on the elements of his claim.


3. Defendants’ Defenses do not Defeat Plaintiff’s Claim

Defendants assert three defenses in response to plaintiff’s claim. First, defendants contend that their fundraising activities are defensible under the business judgment rule. Second, defendants claim that plaintiff failed to follow the proper procedure in instigating a shareholder’s derivative suit. Third, defendants argue that plaintiff failed to follow the proper procedure in instigating a suit against volunteer officers or directors of a nonprofit organization. We address each potential defense in turn and find plaintiff has demonstrated a probability of prevailing notwithstanding defendants’ assertion of these defenses.

The business judgment rule “establishes a presumption that directors’ decisions are based on sound business judgment, and it prohibits courts from interfering in business decisions made by the directors in good faith and in the absence of a conflict of interest.” (Everest Investors 8 v. McNeil Partners (2003) 114 Cal.App.4th 411, 430 (Everest).) However, “[a]n exception to this presumption exists in circumstances which inherently raise an inference of conflict of interest.” (Ibid.) Accordingly, “[t]he business judgment rule does not shield actions taken without reasonable inquiry, with improper motives, or as a result of a conflict of interest.” (Ibid.) Here, while defendants have no personal economic interest in the “Save KPFA” fundraiser, defendants’ withholding of these funds from KPFA contingent upon bringing back the “Morning Show” raises an inference of a conflict of interest that precludes a determination that the business judgment rule defeats plaintiff’s claim. Plaintiff need only establish a probability of prevailing over each defense, and he has reached that relatively low bar here.

Second, defendants contend that plaintiff has no standing to sue on behalf of Pacifica because he failed to follow the proper procedure for instigating a shareholder’s derivative action pursuant to California Corporations Code, section 800, subdivision (b)(1) and (2) (section 800). Section 800 requires a plaintiff to specifically allege in the complaint “plaintiff’s efforts to secure from the board such action as plaintiff desires, or the reasons for not making such effort.” (§ 800, subd. (b)(2).) Plaintiff must further allege that he “has either informed the corporation or the board in writing of the ultimate facts of each cause of action against each defendant or delivered to the corporation or the board a true copy of the complaint which plaintiff proposes to file.” (Ibid.)

Plaintiff need not comply with the requirements of section 800 if he demonstrates “such a demand on the board would have been futile.” (Shields v. Singleton (1993) 15 Cal.App.4th 1611, 1618.) “The test for proving demand futility is whether the facts show a reasonable doubt that (1) the directors are disinterested and independent, and (2) the challenged transaction was otherwise the product of a valid exercise of business judgment.” (Oakland Raiders v. National Football League (2001) 93 Cal.App.4th 572, 587 (Oakland Raiders).) In Oakland Raiders, the court explained “[t]he proof must be of ‘facts specific to each director from which [the trier of fact] can [find a reasonable doubt] that that particular director could or could not be expected to fairly evaluate the claims of the shareholder plaintiff.’ ” (Id.) Here, Pacifica’s Board could not be expected to fairly evaluate the claims because even if they were to consider them, they could not afford to take action regardless. Plaintiff submitted declarations from Pacifica’s Board of Directors and counsel stating that Pacifica would not be taking the action due to financial constraints of the company and that many board members in fact supported plaintiff’s action. Plaintiff also sent a copy of the complaint to Pacifica. This evidence, we conclude, is sufficient to establish that such a demand on the board would have been futile and that he has demonstrated a probability of substantiating the futility exception to the section 800 requirements.

Last, defendants argue that plaintiff cannot bring this cause of action because, prior to filing the complaint, plaintiff was required to request an order from the court pursuant to section 425.15, subdivision (a). Section 425.15, subdivision (a) states, in pertinent part, “[n]o cause of action against a person serving without compensation as a director or officer of a nonprofit corporation described in this section, on account of any negligent act or omission by that person within the scope of that person’s duties as a director acting in the capacity of a board member, or as an officer acting in the capacity of, and within the scope of the duties of, an officer, shall be included in a complaint or other pleading unless the court enters an order allowing the pleading that includes that claim to be filed after the court determines that the party seeking to file the pleading has established evidence that substantiates the claim.” (emphasis added.) The language of section 425.15 makes clear that statute only applies to negligent acts or omissions. Plaintiff’s breach of fiduciary duty of undivided loyalty cause of action requires proof that defendants “knowingly acting against plaintiff’s interests in connection with a transaction.” (CACI No. 4102.) Patently, section 425.15, subdivision (a) does not apply here as plaintiff’s claim is not premised upon any negligent act or omission.

In sum, we conclude that the trial court erred in denying defendants’ motion to strike on the grounds that plaintiff’s activity did not “arise from” protected activity. However, because plaintiff has demonstrated a probability of prevailing on his breach of fiduciary duty claim, we conclude the trial court correctly denied the motion to strike.


DISPOSITION

The trial court’s order denying the motion to strike is affirmed. Each party to bear their own costs on appeal.

_________________________
Jenkins, J.

We concur:

_________________________
McGuiness, P. J.

_________________________
Pollak, J.


*** *** ***
*** *** ***

Updates, reports & essays about KPFA & Pacifica Foundation Radio at
UNITED FOR COMMUNITY RADIO


KPFA 94.1 FM is one of five stations of the Pacifica radio network which are located in major cities across the country. The other stations are WBAI 99.5 in New York, WPFW 89.3 in Washington DC, KPFT 90.1 in Houston, and KPFK 90.7 in Los Angeles. There are also about 160 affiliate stations.

































Labels: , , , , , , , , ,