KPFA/Pacifica: Lords & Ladies vs. the Peasants





The Legacy of the '90s at KPFA

at KPFA/Pacifica

Lords & Ladies vs. the Peasants


by Daniel Borgström
Sept 16, 2024

Longtime KPFA listeners remember 1999 as the year of the Hijacking, the Lockout, and the massive response. Ten thousand people marched through the streets of Berkeley chanting "Take back KPFA!" and "Save Pacifica!" The battle was waged in the station's studio, on the streets, and even in the courts. The good guys won, and the hijackers were thrown out. But acolytes of that regime remained, and their proteges are today very much back in control -- the gatekeeper clique at KPFA.

Sadly, the KPFA scenario is often repeated in the affairs of humankind. I missed the French Revolution, but I imagine it went much like the one at KPFA. The Bastille was stormed in a day, but the fight wasn't over. (Still isn't, in fact.) It often seems to follow a pattern: There's a dramatic moment, a historic victory, but then after everything finally seems to be on the road to eternal happiness, come months and years of intense strife. Issues get complicated, seemingly arcane, and it gets vicious. Why the ongoing conflict? people ask, wondering why the former dear comrades can't just be nice to each other and get along. They're all progressives, aren't they? (Or are they?)

The 1999 uprising at KPFA began, very much like the French Revolution, with a split among the power elite. Like Louis XVI of France, the headstrong monarch of KPFA/Pacifica quarreled with her courtiers, threw them out of the palace, locked the gate, and called in mercenary troops -- rent-a-cops. The station's disenfranchised nobility, losing their wits and acting out of sheer desperation, allied themselves with dissidents, appealed to the rabble, and called for mass demonstrations. The response was huge, and to the astonishment of everyone, the rebels emerged victorious. The intolerable monarch went into exile, leaving the kingdom to the triumphant radio-heads -- a motley assemblage of commoners, peasants and riffraff, together with nobility and bureaucrats from the old regime. Everyone pledged eternal loyalty to the ideals of the revolution, the Pacifica Mission Statement.

At first there was wild jubilation, dancing in the streets, and a huge amount of good feeling. All the worthy people were dear sisters and brothers, in a splendid state of living happily ever after. The bluebloods and bureaucrats from the old regime joined in the celebrations together with their low-class brethren, graciously tolerating the situation, putting a good face on it, and biding their time. The problem was that the ungracious mob now expected to have a say in the running of the show. So the lords and ladies were then faced with the daunting task of getting this horde of loud, smelly, cantankerous, meddlesome peasants to leave the castle, go back to tilling the lands, and give up their preposterous notions of involving themselves in governance of the station.

Major differences and animosities began to surface during the drafting of Pacifica's new constitution, known as "The Bylaws." Courtiers and bureaucrats from the old regime tried to bend the new document to their liking, intending to preserve whatever they could of their former status and privileges; and they did win major concessions. Nevertheless, the dissidents stuck to a vision they'd been nurturing for many long years during the decade preceding 1999. The traditional motto of "liberté, égalité, fraternité" was updated to include "democracy, transparency, accountability."

The outcome, beginning in the early 2000s, was a radically new system of radio governance, a "listener democracy." Listeners who donated $25 or more to the station became voters, choosing their representatives to sit on boards overseeing the KPFA station and the Pacifica radio network. In radio governance, this was a revolutionary concept; however the Lords & Ladies found it absolutely revolting.

There was a time (the good old days) when peasants knew their place. One can sympathize with the plight and anguish of the once proud KPFA aristocrats, courtiers, and bureaucrats, who were to find themselves sitting shoulder to shoulder with unwashed peasants who were elected to the new Local Station Board (the LSB).

KPFA's first board election was held in the winter of 2003-2004, and as spring became summer, the reaction against the new Pacifica Bylaws began. An opening shot was a letter from a patrician lady who declared, "I do think the bylaws are a disaster." Her ladyship, a show host at KPFA, was an enlightened aristocrat, one of capitalism's discontents who loved the downtrodden peasants and hated their oppressors. It was just that she didn't want to see peasants trooping into her castle, intruding on her domain, and stepping on her privileges with their muddy feet.

The newly elected board members took their seats on the newly formed LSB; and the division between the patricians and lower orders soon became apparent. A leaked email of September 1st 2005 revealed that a lord had called his group to a "general strategy session" .and among the topics on his agenda: "how do we make our enemies own the problems that are to come?"

"You consider us your 'enemies'?" fellow board members asked the author of the email. His reply was evasive.

Among other strategic topics listed in that Sept 1st email was the "Roy issue." That referred to a disagreement between the bluebloods and station's general manager (GM) over the scheduling of a popular show, DN! Such a disagreement might seem rather insignificant, but it suggested that the manager was not a yes-man, inclined to do the do the bluebloods' bidding. So grounds had to be found for his dismissal.

They charged the manager with sexual molestation, a charge which did not hold up under investigation. Although the manager was cleared of charges, the accusations created an unpleasant, or even toxic atmosphere. Eventually, in Jan 2006, the mgr. was fired, but for undisclosed reasons. That became a landmark victory for the lords and ladies, and every general manager since then, from 2006 to the present (2024) has been more or less in their pocket.

According to the Bylaws, the LSB has considerable power in its job of overseeing the station. It plays a role in selecting the General Manager, and is required to do a yearly job performance evaluation of the manager. In practice, the bluebloods on the board have been able to avoid such obligations and render the board ineffectual. In 2020 it was discovered that property taxes hadn't been paid on the station's studio building for over 6 years, and the Alameda County tax office was about to seize the property and auction it off. That upset some listeners who urged board members to hold the station's manager accountable. However, the lordly faction, which held a board majority, came to the manager's defense, and passed a motion (11-20-2020) reading:

"The KPFA Local Station Board finds that due to numerous false and/or misleading accusations made about the KPFA General Manager, it is not possible for the KPFA Local Station Board to conduct a fair and unbiassed evaluation of the KPFA General Manager at this time." (And in their motion they misspelled "unbiased.")

At first glance, this might appear to be a worker-run collective, a socialist ideal. Sadly however, that is not the reality at KPFA. The bluebloods who became the gatekeepers of the station are a relatively small clique of holdovers from the hijacker regime of the 1990s which was linked to the Clinton Administration. They and their acolytes, though few in number, are well connected to entities outside the station. Most of the unpaid staff, who in fact produce most of the programming, are excluded from the ruling clique, as are some of the paid programmers. They're part of the peasantry.

Their faction which represents them on the LSB has used several names over the years; currently they call themselves the "Protectors," and they openly state that they protect the staff and management -- which they do. (That is, they protect members of their in-group and mgrs. who align themselves with the lords and ladies.) And they boast that the station is doing great.

In reality, the station is surviving -- but not doing great. Listener subscribership has fallen to about half of what it was a decade ago. This problem is not unique to KPFA -- public radio stations almost everywhere are losing listeners. Young people turn to podcasts, and other online sources of information. KPFA must do more to adapt to technological change and new ways (some now not-so-new) of accessing media. KPFA's archives must be searchable; otherwise they're like a library with no catalog. Multimedia is no longer the future; it's here. More programming must include video -- those are a few of the things that reformers are urging. However, the bluebloods have been slow to make such innovations; perhaps that's the nature of a status quo group.

Meanwhile, the whole purpose of having a radio station is its programming. Since 1949 KPFA has stood up to Joe McCarthy and HUAC, opposed the wars in Korea and Vietnam, and promoted progressive causes. Today many excellent programs at the station are still reporting on a wide variety of events including the genocide in Gaza. Nevertheless, not everything on KPFA is progressive. For over a year the station has been giving nine hours a week to Ian Masters, a show host who has lambasted Venezuela and Cuba, and attacked Mumia Abu-Jamal. Masters calls Mumia's supporters "gullible."

In attempting to describe the situation at KPFA, I've been using the analogy of Lords, Ladies and Peasants; though some observers with a somewhat less medieval mindset might prefer to call it "class struggle." Call it what you may, the station is run by a power elite who lord it over the rest. And though this is a leftwing radical radio station where almost everybody would consider themselves "Progressives," I would suggest calling them "establishment progressives." The operative word here is "establishment."

At the root of the problem is a legacy of the hijacker regime of the 1990s that never got resolved. The picture is not encouraging, but I don't think it's impossible either. I'm just saying that we have a long and hard battle ahead of us.


DANIEL BORGSTRÖM


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Right now the station is having an election for the LSB. Although I call it a struggle between the Lords and Ladies vs. the Peasants, it could also be called a struggle between the status quo folks and the reformers. The reformers, known as "RESCUE PACIFICA are presenting these eight excellent candidates, or as I might call them: uncommon commoners.

Rabab Abdulhadi - Professor at San Francisco State; Palestinian scholar / activist

Donna Carter - Retired nurse and California Nurses Association contract negotiator

Stan Woods - Oscar Grant committee member; former ILWU Local 6 board member

Virginia Browning - Former radio reporter / producer / program host

Felipe Messina - Modesto Cop Watch member; IBEW member; clean-air campaigner

Pathma Venasithamby - Jewish Voice for Peace member

Phoebe Thomas (Sorgen) - Social Justice Committee of Berkeley Unitarian-Universalists

Michai Freeman - Disability-rights organizer; former Berkeley City Council candidate

These Rescue Pacifica candidates are endorsed by past and present KPFA staff members, including Andres Soto, Peter Phillips, Joy Moore, Ann Garrison, Frank Sterling, and Anthony Fest, as well as many peace and justice advocates. Please read more at
rescuepacifica.net



Your "STV" ballot allows you to vote for multiple candidates; please vote for all eight Rescue-Pacifica candidates. Thanks for your support!



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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 Rescue Pacifica

rescuepacifica.net

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This is an updated and expanded version of an article I wrote years ago.
Daniel



















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BUDGET from the Cold





The BUDGET
that came in from the Cold

KPFA's board meeting on Sept 23, 2023


The Saturday, September 23rd meeting of the KPFA Local Station Board (LSB) was scheduled to be short, just 2 hours -- 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Christina Huggins was chairing and the "Protectors" have a super majority on this board.

Two significant things happened.

First, this was the yearly BUDGET meeting, the one where Business Manager Maria Negret presents her budget and the board approves it. However, this time there would be no budget -- that's what Maria Negret told us a few days earlier, at the budget workshop of Monday, Sept 18th.

Well, bizarre things do happen -- or don't happen at KPFA. There was the time property taxes weren't paid for 6 years. Audits get delayed. A couple years ago a court was petitioned to put KPFA/Pacifica into receivership. And more, the list is long. This time a budget was not happening. No budget, Maria said.

Nevertheless, five days later, at the Saturday, September 23rd LSB meeting Maria Negret presented a budget, which was approved, as budgets always are, by the "Protectors" board majority.

This unexpected budget included $$$ for a lawsuit, and as soon it was mentioned, discussion on it immediately got cut off. It was supposedly confidential information, though possibly a matter of public record described in an article at
Pacificainexile.org.

CAROL WOLFLEY'S MOTION

The other significant item was a motion presented by Secretary Carol Wolfley at the very end of the meeting; I think it was at about 2 minutes to 1:00 p.m. Although this meeting was scheduled to adjourn "time certain" at 1:00 p.m., this meeting (Carol's motion, that is) continued on till 1:09 p.m. This is not the normal protocol, not even at this LSB.

Normally, when more time is needed, someone makes a motion to extend the meeting. Not this time though.

Nor was the motion on the agenda. It was sprung on us in these last two minutes.

Carol Wolfley's motion was to revive an "ethics" committee to look into possible libel and defamation.

Last year the "Protectors" created an "ethics" committee and used it to kick Elizabeth Milos off the LSB. A couple months later the Pacifica National Board (PNB) overruled the KPFA LSB, so with that, Elizabeth was returned to her seat.

So given their recent history, it looks like the "Protectors" may be planning to kick more Rescue Pacifica people off the board. It's possible that what they call "libel" and "defamation" might be a reaction to criticisms of the "Protectors" and the station's management expressed during the current LSB election campaign.

An indication of what they mean by "defamation" may be seen in LSB Chair Christina Huggins' commentary on my article "Is KPFA Transitioning from Antiwar to
Peacewashing?"

Huggins accuses me of making "false statements" and says my article is "defamatory- not only to Ian Masters, but [to] the KPFA secretary and Chair."

(The chair and secretary are Christina Huggins and Carol Wolfley, respectively.)

In her email, Huggins went on to compare me to "Joseph Goebbels."

I would say this suggests that the "Protectors" faction does not take kindly to fact-based criticism.

Hopefully, in this current election, now in its last week to vote, the "Protectors" will lose their super majority.


Daniel Borgström
Member of KPFA's Local Station Board (at least for the time being).



RELATED ARTICLES

"How the Seizure of a Radio Station in New York led to the
Seizure of $305,000 from KPFA"

Why didn't KPFA
defend its journalist?

The impending pro-war Democratic Party takeover of Pacifica Radio


FOR MORE INFO Please visit these websites:

RESCUE PACIFICA
rescuepacifica.net

PACIFICA IN EXILE
pacificainexile.org

Pacifica Fightback for Democracy

KPFA 94.1 FM is one of five stations of the Pacifica radio network 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 250 affiliate stations.






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takeover of WBAI in New York




The takeover of WBAI in New York: a view from KPFA in California


by Daniel Borgström
October 11, 2019

A few days ago (October 7), people from KPFA took part in a shut down of WBAI 99.5 FM, the Pacifica sister station in New York. This action was done in the name of Pacifica, which owns WBAI as well as KPFA and three other stations, but it was in complete violation of the Pacifica bylaws, and was planned in secret and kept from other board members. The takeover was temporarily halted by a TRO, but the studio was found in disorder, computers and other equipment were missing, though reportedly later recovered. Even pictures were taken from the walls. At a court hearing on October 10th a judge reversed most of the TRO, allowing the intruders to retain control of WBAI's airwaves and play piped in filler music and material from other Pacifica stations, some of which included a KPFA fund drive. So KPFA, a California station, held a fund drive in New York -- for the benefit of KPFA of course. (It will be interesting to see if they harvested anything more than ill will.)

The surprise raid was led by Pacifica's new interim Executive Director, John Vernile, and was assisted by persons from other Pacifica stations. Although people from KPFA do not appear to have been physically at the scene, KPFA's general manager Quincy McCoy was named as "Consulting Programmer of Pacifica Across America," a newly created position.

The idea behind that ham-handed action was supposedly to save the Pacifica network from financial disaster. The financial problems are real, nobody disputes that. None of the five Pacifica stations are doing really well. KPFA has lost a quarter of its membership during the past decade, and it continues to lose listeners; its cash flow shows a $433,000 short fall. Ironically, the only Pacifica station showing signs of improvement is WBAI; its listenership has increased. But whatever WBAI's potential for recovery may have been, it seems pretty well nipped in the bud. And however this turns out, it's going to cost money that Pacifica cannot afford, further dragging the network deeper into the hole.

Even if WBAI could somehow be magically disappeared from the network, a complex host of other problems would remain. Some of these are unique to Pacifica, and some are not. Most non-commercial stations are in trouble these days.

The various reasons seem to be complex. Here in this essay I want to talk about just one particular aspect which I've seen during my 15 years as an observer of KPFA and now a board member. Namely, that KPFA has for many years been living beyond its means. And there's a huge amount of denial about that; it's kind of like trying to tell the CEO of a petroleum company that oil and natural gas need to stay in the ground.

I might call this "Denial in Action." At times it has often looked to me as though this whole insane spending spree were driven by some deliberate force. Can some people really be that incompetent? I often wonder. Well, these are some of my observations going back to 2005. Hopefully this can serve as background to what we're seeing today. I am of course relating my experiences at KPFA, the Pacifica station where I live in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Warnings were sounded at least as far back as in 2005 when several board members expressed concern that there were "too many FTEs." It came up during one of the first board meetings I attended, and I remember asking the person next to me what an FTE was. "A full-time equivalent," I was told, and it was afterwards explained to me that the station was acquiring more paid staff than it could afford in the long run. That was detailed in the Local Station Board's Minority Report of September 17, 2005.

In those days the station was actually doing well financially. But according to several board members, LaVarn Williams, Max Blanchet and Marnie Tattersall (all with solid backgrounds in finance), the cost of so much paid staff was not sustainable. KPFA needed to slow down on the hiring, look ahead, and plan accordingly.

Nevertheless, year after year, the warnings were ignored, dismissed, disregarded. Persons expressing them were disparaged, even yelled at. The unsustainable budgets were promoted by "Save KPFA," the slate of board members who represented the station's power clique.

That group has used several names over the years, first it was "KPFA Forward," later "Concerned Listeners," then "SaveKPFA." (They currently use the name UIR, "United for Independent Radio.")

Although SaveKPFA refused to acknowledge publicly that their hiring policy was not sustainable, they seem to have been anticipating a crisis and were prepared to put the blame on others. An intriguing email from that same month of September 2005 turned up as sort of a one-email Wikileak. It's the email which infamously suggested "dismantling the LSB." An even more foreboding line in that same email read: "How do we make our enemies own the problems that are to come?" The author was Brian Edwards-Tiekert, who appeared to be SaveKPFA's chief strategist.

It wasn't just the bloated budgets at KPFA that caused the eventual crisis. There was also SaveKPFA's unholy alliance with JUC, the New York group which was then running WBAI into the ground, generating another financial drain on the Pacifica network. Interestingly, these two groups, SaveKPFA and JUC, seemed to thoroughly dislike each other. Their alliance appears to have been one of convenience, a mutual non-aggression pact, one of shielding each other from oversight. Mismanagement at both stations bled the network.

Several years passed in this irresponsible fashion until the recession of 2008. It hit Pacifica hard, and the inevitable financial crisis was no longer deniable. Even SaveKPFA's Brian Edwards-Tiekert expressed concern and called for layoffs throughout the network. These very necessary cutbacks were carried out at the rest of Pacifica's five stations, but not at KPFA.

It was always difficult, often impossible, to get accurate, detailed information from the SaveKPFA-dominated management. In 2005, board members LaVarn Williams and Richard Phelps spent over a year fighting SaveKPFA to get access to financial records of the foundation. They won that battle, but the war went on. In 2008 SaveKPFA's Dan Siegel illegally stopped an inspection. The power clique did not willingly allow access to information; board members outside the inner circle continued to be denied it.

For most of the decade up until 2009, the Pacifica National Board (PNB) was dominated by SaveKPFA and its allies, but in that year they were voted out and the new Executive Director and CFO were chosen from the opposition. SaveKPFA then launched a disinformation campaign against the Pacifica Foundation. On August 6, 2009, there was a front page article in the Berkeley Daily Planet accusing Pacifica of improperly taking $100K from KPFA. That news leak came from Brian Edwards-Tiekert, the treasurer. But on investigation it was found that no such "raid" on KPFA's money had occurred. The newspaper printed a retraction, but SaveKPFA continued to spread the story, despite its having been exposed as false. Then LSB chair Conn Hallinan, who certainly must have known better, wrote an email accusing Pacifica of "an old fashioned smash and grab" on KPFA's funds.

That was the beginning of a swiftboating campaign against Pacifica in which the SaveKPFA group worked to conjure up images of 1999, portraying Pacifica as the bad guy, the beast, the oppressor and exploiter of KPFA. It was at that time that the group took the name "SaveKPFA," stealing it from an opposition group of the early 1990s. Members of the original 1993 Save KPFA group were outraged and objected strenuously. But the new "SaveKPFA" continued to use its ill-gotten name.

At the end of 2009 it was discovered that a $375,000 check had been left in a drawer until after it expired. KPFA's then General Manager, Lemlem Rijio, took the fall for that and was fired. But it seems highly unlikely that she was the only one who knew about that "forgotten" check.

"How could anyone forget a six-figure check!" KPFA activists asked. Some suspected the "oversight" was intentional and that SaveKPFA folks were deliberately working to bankrupt Pacifica in order to acquire KPFA. Until then, few had openly expressed such suspicions. But after that "forgotten" check-in-the-drawer incident, many of us concluded that if SaveKPFA were not actually planning some such scenario, then it could only be surmised that they were destroying both KPFA and Pacifica out of sheer stupidity.

That was in 2010. Disaster was averted that year, though not without a huge fight. For now, let's fast-forward to 2015: SaveKPFA and its allies were back in charge of KPFA/Pacifica, again pushing the network towards financial extinction. We discovered that Dan Siegel and another prominent SaveKPFA member, Margy Wilkinson, had secretly created, filed and registered a corporation, complete with articles of incorporation, which they named the "KPFA Foundation." It appears that Siegel and Wilkinson created this clandestine "KPFA Foundation" for the purpose of privately taking over KPFA's radio license and real estate assets upon the dissolution of the Pacifica Foundation. In short, it was a plan to steal KPFA/Pacifica.

Strange things continued. In 2015 General Manager Quincy McCoy canceled the summer's fund drive when KPFA had received two large bequests, enabling the station to skip the drive. It seemed as though the station were suddenly awash in money. However, it turned out that $400,000 of the bequest money was specifically intended for the Pacifica National Office, and was improperly diverted to KPFA by members of SaveKPFA. That wrongful diversion of funds intensified the chaos in a system that was far from robust.

Meanwhile, there's the matter of the station's programming, which traditionally had been staunchly antiwar. However, the station has been moving towards the right, increasingly echoing neoliberal/neocon narratives of "humanitarian" intervention. Several programs have been taken off the air, most famously "Guns and Butter," which was disappeared along with its 17-year archive. "Counterspin," "Discrete Music," and "Twit Wit Radio" have also been taken down and replaced by greatly watered-down fare.

We've been waiting fearfully to see which radical KPFA program would be next on the chopping block. It turns out they were aiming for bigger game -- they went clear across the continent, all the way to New York, and shut down Pacifica sister station WBAI 99.5 FM.

DANIEL BORGSTRÖM
member of KPFA's Local Station Board,

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KPFA's ‘Rescue Pacifica’ candidates stand with WBAI against takeover
October 10, 2019

by Rescue Pacifica
rescuepacifica.net

Statement by ‘Rescue Pacifica’ candidates for the KPFA Local Station Board in Support of WBAI

Rescue Pacifica vigorously condemns the shutdown of KPFA’s sister station WBAI in New York City. On Oct. 7, there was an attempt by Pacifica’s interim executive director (iED) to close the station and terminate all WBAI staff.

This surprise attack took place early in the morning in the middle of WBAI’s fall fund drive, as well as the voting period for the Local Station Board elections. It is completely at odds with what democratic, transparent and responsible governance should look like and contrary to Pacifica’s original grassroots mission.

Later that day a New York judge issued a temporary restraining order (TRO) preventing iED John Vernile from dismissing the staff and interfering with the station’s operations, pending a hearing to be held on Oct. 18.

On October 10, the iED and six Pacifica National Board members went to court and won an order to partially “vacate” the TRO, giving control of the station’s airwaves and website back to them. The judge also ruled that they still did not have the authority to summarily fire WBAI’s staff pending the October 18th hearing.

For long-time KPFA supporters, the attack on WBAI should bring back unhappy memories of the 1999 takeover attempt at KPFA. The cast of characters is different this time, but the objective appears to be the same – to replace local community-based hosts with shows piped-in from elsewhere, and perhaps to eventually sell the station’s valuable broadcast frequency.

The attack on WBAI is the latest in a series of recent undemocratic actions to happen recently at the network. A group calling itself “Restructure Pacifica” has been circulating a petition to replace the present bylaws with a system that would eliminate listener-elected Local Station Boards. There is also an attempt underway to remove KPFA board member Tom Voorhees from the Pacifica National Board, despite Tom’s unequaled knowledge of radio.

Rescue Pacifica‘s listener candidates are Tom Voorhees, Marilyn Langlois, Karina Stenquist, Christine Pepin, Mantra Plonsey, and Don Macleay. Our staff candidates are Ann Garrison and Steve Zeltzer.

There will be an emergency WBAI town hall meeting on Sunday, October 13, at the ATRIUM at 60 Wall Street, NYC, starting at 1 p.m.


for more info:

RESCUE PACIFICA
rescuepacifica.net

PACIFICA IN EXILE
pacificainexile.org



KPFA 94.1 FM is one of five stations of the Pacifica radio network 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 250 affiliate stations.








DISCLAIMER: This is not an official Pacifica Foundation website nor an official website of any of the five Pacifica Radio Stations (KPFA Radio, KPFK Radio, KPFT Radio, WBAI Radio, WPFW Radio). Opinions and facts alleged on this site belong to the author(s) of the website only and should NOT be assumed to be true or to reflect the editorial stance or policy of the Pacifica Foundation, or any of the five Pacifica Radio Stations (KPFA Radio, KPFK Radio, KPFT Radio, WBAI Radio, WPFW Radio), or the opinions of its management, Pacifica National Board, station staff or other listener members.



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Peter Franck's Onion Paper





The Onion Paper
Pacifica Network History, 1999
by Peter Franck





Peter Franck did a regular commentary on legal issues on KPFA during the 1960s. He was a member of the KPFA Board, starting in 1973, a member of the Pacifica Board from 1975 to 1984, and President of Pacifica Foundation from 1980 to 1984. He continues to be involved in ongoing discussions. His website is
culturelaw.com

This a paper by Peter Franck presented at a forum on Pacifica issues at "The Onion" in Los Angeles in 1999


PETER FRANCK:

“Radio should be converted from a Distribution System to a Communication System. Radio could be the most wonderful Public Communication System imaginable. A gigantic system of channels, could be, that is if it were capable not only of transmitting but of receiving; of making the listener not only hear but also speak, not of isolating him [I should add: or her] but of connecting them.” Bertold Brecht in 1931. That's a kind of vision that I think we should be fighting for and re-dedicating Pacifica to.

I came onto the KPFA Local Advisory Board in 1973, served on the Pacifica Board, starting about 1975 and was President of the Foundation for four years, early in the 1980's.

How many of you know what microradio is? A lot of us have been involved in the fight for Micro Radio, it's very low power radio, it's cheap, you can get it on the air for a couple of hundred dollars. The FCC is seriously considering legalizing it . There's a few more day's left to file your comments to the FCC, I'll tell you how to do that later in the day. We're not going to lose Pacifica, but even if we did, we will have 10,000 small KPFK's around the country with Micro Radio .

Nine or ten years ago when the microradio Movement was starting, a few of us in the Bay Area attended a workshop organized by Paper Tiger television, where a Professor, from the University of Kyoto, showed us how to assemble a microradio Transmitter with $15.00 worth of Radio Shack parts. As he did this he was telling how they did this in Japan and in 45 minutes he was on the air. We asked him how powerful the folks in Japan thought microradio should be, what the range should be. And he said it shouldn't be any greater then the distance somebody could bicycle to the studio to participate in the conversation. I think that's the spirit that we have to get back to. At the same time there's a challenge to integrate that vision with the countries’ need for a powerful, progressive voice on the air.

For awhile in the 1970s the Advisory Board had been very busy people; Ron Dellums, a congressperson from the bay area (for so many years) was on that. At one of those meetings Dellums said to us; "Look, you guys have got to decide whether you want to be the newsletter of the Left or the newspaper of the Left." Whether you want to be a house organ or a means of reaching out. And I think that's a serious consideration. Marc Cooper who uses that line sort of got it from me and since I'm a Copyright lawyer I may go after him for copyright infringement. I'll just say, as an aside, don't listen to what the folks apologizing for Pacifica, or folks at the head of Pacifica are saying, watch what they are doing.

In the summer of 1960, I sat on the sidewalk here in Los Angeles in front of the Democratic Party’s 1960 Convention where John F. Kennedy was being nominated, as part of a Civil Rights demonstration against the party. Next to me were Marion Berry (who was much thinner than he is now) who was then the head of the Student Non-Violent Coordination Committee, the most militant part of the Civil Rights Movement, Tom Hayden (who was also thinner than he is now. Of course I haven't changed), and others from the student movement. We went from there, that night, to hear Martin Luther King speak at the Shrine Auditorium. This was the only time I ever heard Martin Luther King speak. Martin Luther King spoke to everybody in that audience. He spoke to the Ph.Ds. He spoke to the sharecroppers. He spoke to the students. He spoke to the activists. He knew how to get his message over to everybody who needed to hear it, and that is what Pacifica has to aspire to. Now we're not all Martin Luther Kings, and we can't do that all the time, but as I say, I believe that's what we really have to aspire to, and that takes a dedication and a seriousness and a commitment to the Vision and the Mission; which I think is being fretted away in terms of the current leadership.

To highlight the degree of change: 20 years ago, the manager of KPFK (Mark Schubb's predecessor), Will Lewis, went to jail rather than turn over to the Los Angeles Police, the communiqués that the station had gotten from the Symbionese Liberation Army, the people who had kidnapped Parry Hearst. We felt very strongly then that Pacifica, as a free speech news organization had no business being part of a chain of evidence to the Police. Our job was to get the word out, the information out, the Police’s job was to do their Police thing and those were entirely separate.

Fast forward 20 years to today [1999] when the leadership of Pacifica turns over to the Police all the communications, emails and letters they have gotten protesting the current policy. Now, what a difference, twenty years makes. How did we get here?

Lew Hill was a World War II pacifist, a Consciousness Objector (CO). He went to CO camps, believed in peace and non-violence. He was a Journalist in Washington DC, right after the war, heard Churchill's, "Iron Curtain" speech, saw the gathering of cold war storm clouds, was very worried about the threat to peace that that was. He was not allowed, by the radio station, he was a reporter for, to talk about it because they were afraid of offending the sponsors, the advertisers. So he quit and came out to Berkeley and found some kindred souls and he decided, he realized, that the only way you could have a station dedicated to Peace and Justice and Free Speech was if the only sponsors were the listeners. Hence: Listener-Sponsored Radio.

Now a very interesting litmus paper test on where people are coming from is when they talk about the station. Is it listener-sponsored or is it listener-supported? There's been a drift, a strong one to “listener supported”. Frankly, the only time now, even on KPFA that the term is mostly listeners-sponsored is when they're Pitching. Listener-supported is a different thing from listener-sponsored a different kind of relationship. Sponsors call the shots. Supporters are passive.

If you know you're going to start a grocery store, unless you're going to own it personally as a sole proprietorship, you have to have an entity. So if you're going to start a grocery store around here you might have the name Northgate Groceries Inc. In the 50's, KPFA, had to have a legal entity holding KPFA and that was the Pacifica Foundation. A California Non-Profit Corporation set up at the beginning.

Folks down here in Los Angeles, led by the late Lloyd Smith and others around the ACLU, in the 50's, were very concerned about the fact that you couldn't say much about McCarthyism and the Red-Scare that was going around at that time. They felt correctly and knew that Los Angeles needed a listener-sponsored station; raised the money, formed it and approached Pacifica and said, look, we'd like to link up with you and be part of you, and they did and that's how we got KPFK.

Louis Schwitzer, a New York millionaire who had started a fine music station (mostly as a hobby) got tired of it. One day he picked up the phone and called up Russell Jorgenson, then president of the Pacifica Foundation and manager of KPFA and said, "Would you like a radio station in New York?" Well it took him quite a while to convince Jorgenson that this just wasn't a hoax call. When he found out it was for real, he picked himself up from the floor and WBAI became part of Pacifica. I was in law school in New York at the time, and heard Malcolm X and so on, it was a wonderful addition to New York.

Then people concerned with the Civil Rights Movement started KPFT in Houston. It was bombed off the air twice by the Klan. And it has come out since then that the FBI was very much involved in that bombing. Not in solving it, but doing it.

When it was just KPFA and KPFK, the Board of Directors of Pacifica Foundation, a single group, could meet. California is not that big. After WBAI came along it became unwieldy, the members of that Board felt they couldn't stay in touch enough with the sense and pulse of the community so that's when they set up Advisory Boards.

The Advisory Boards then selected the members of the Pacifica Board. They decided that it was important to have a station in the Nation's Capitol and applied for a License, WPFW. There was an eight-year fight to get that License and finally it came on. Now both KPFT and WBAI broadcast mostly music. What's important about this is, what had grown up, what had been created by these people, a lot of hard work was: Listener-Sponsored Radio.

Now this Country one doesn't have to believe in a conspiracy theory: people who meet in the same room and decide everything. But there is an elite. There are people who have enormous amounts of power, they know each other and they are on interconnecting Boards and clubs. In those circles the big Foundations do a lot of the planning.

The Carnegie Foundation commissioned a study on broadcasting and the Carnegie Commission came up with a proposal that there should be Public Broadcasting. If you read the "Carnegie Commission Report" carefully, what it really says is that, the people in this room, the upper classes, the intelligentsia, the activists, aren't listening to the mass media, aren't watching television, aren't listening to popular radio. We need, they said, a way of reaching them with a message of the wholeness of the United States, and how good things are. We need a channel for to the elite, to the educated classes, to the opinion leaders. That is why the Carnegie Commission recommended and why Congress did set up Public Broadcasting. Public Broadcasting originated as a very different animal, for very different kinds of purposes. In the middle there came Community radio, smaller stations, more or less modeled on Pacifica.

Since that time, there's been a pull, and I think its been going on for almost 20 years. There's been a sucking sound from Washington; sucking listener-sponsored radio into the world of public radio. But Public Radio is really Government radio. That’s were they money comes from, that’s who runs it.

Robert Coonrod, who precipitated this crisis, since 1967, made his career running the propaganda system for the US Government overseas. Running a system whereby the US Government puts out its views and its ideas to the people of the world, Radio Free Europe, Voice of America, Radio Marti and so on. The new President of National Public radio has exactly the same background. What's going on here? People who were in charge of sending U.S. Government propaganda to the peoples of the world are put in charge of what's called Public radio, and are using those same skills to send their message, the Government's message, to the people of this Country. Pacifica is a giant exception to this.

When the United States wants to subjugate Yugoslavia, what does it do? One of the first targets it bombs is the radio and television stations. Now I believe that what's going on, led by people and money at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting is a bombing of listener-sponsored radio, the bombing of the American public, trying to mute the independence and the message of listener-sponsored radio.

Let me shift slightly to the dynamics within Pacifica, which are important. Things have got to change. Its not the case that everything was honky-dory and perfect in the last period of years, or ever. Pacifica has been very important and very good but there are some serious problems with its structure. For most of Pacifica's existence, until about the last ten years, paid staff was really dominate, staff really ran things and mostly made the decisions, and there was a great deal of good to that but there were also some problems. People tended to hang onto their programs, there tended to be a tacit agreement among staff: “I don't question your program, you don't question my program.” People who started out having a lot to say maybe ran out of things to say; and maybe there should have been some rotation. There was no mechanism for doing that because, as I use to say, the managers really had very little authority, they floated on a sea of volunteerism where they couldn't do a whole lot. That did lead to some ossification.

Then a shift started to happen under Reagan era deregulation. Non-commercial stations were allowed for the first time to rent out to commercial outfits what's called their sidebands. Each transmitter, like KPFK, has two other signals it can send out which are good for sending out data, to hand held stock quotation things, reading for the blind, others kinds of information, specialized information services. These are very valuable and the administration of them is a bit complicated. So Pacifica, as a national entity, took on the job of making these deals. Renting out the ten sidebands on the five stations (two on each). And Pacifica kept that money.

Now up until that time, the Pacifica National Office (which was always small) got all of its money from the stations. There was a tithe the stations paid to national which was two or three percent of their listener income. The managers had to actually write those checks and that gave the managers a lot of defacto power. When Pacifica suddenly had large amounts of money coming from another source, unaccountable to the stations, power started to shift in a very serious way.

Part of the mechanism for Public Broadcasting making its influence felt on community radio (and muting it) was something called the "Healthy Station Project," funded by CBP and run by Pacifica executive director Lynn Chadwick's ex-husband. He went around to community stations, Pacifica stations and others; dangling money and saying, You've got to professionalize. You've got to have less volunteers. You've got to take the power of the volunteer away. You've got to be slicker and go for a wealthier audience. A lot of stations felt that pressure and there was a definite move in community radio in that direction, in some stations and the distinction between listener-sponsored radio and public radio got blurred. The healthy station project was fairly influential in Pacifica stations too.

Fast forward to recent events and these have been alluded to today, but I think it's very important to understand how we got where we are now. The current crisis has been precipitated by the firing of Nicole Sawaya, who was the manager of KPFA, all factions, up and down, thought she was terrific and believe me, if you can get that reputation in a Pacifica station, that's a miracle. Managing a Pacifica station is not an easy job. So she must have been doing a terrific job.

Two years earlier, wanting to insulate themselves from local board and community criticism, the Pacifica leadership had solicited an opinion from CPB President Robert Coonrod, an opinion that the current structure (of station board electing the national board0 violated the Public Broadcasting Act. They got Coonrod to say that if they didn't change this structure quickly they would lose the next CPB check, which was 1.4 million dollars. I'm a lawyer, and I went back and looked at the Public Broadcasting Act and this legal opinion is entirely bogus, just looking at the text of the Statue, in fact, the Statue was based on, it was modeled on the Pacifica structure at the time it was passed. We were the model for this law, which they are now saying that we're violating, and at the time that they set up this law, the entire Pacifica Board was selected by the stations’ Local Boards. To put pressure on wobbly national board members, the Executive Director asked the managers to do a budget laying out where would they cut if they lost this 1.4 million dollars.

Now there's a multiplier effect in a Pacifica station’s budget. The fixed cost of Pacifica stations are about fifty percent of their budget, the rent, the mortgage, the electric bill and all that; so the only place that you can cut is staff, that's the only fungible cost. So if you lose 15 percent of your income you have to cut your staff by 30 percent. If you lose 20 percent of your income, you have to cut your staff by 40 percent. Cuts like that are (obviously) devastating and disruptive both to the people cut and to the operation of the stations. None of the stations are fat. That would be a drastic thing to do.

I told you, Pacifica used to get 2 to 3 percent of the Station's income, now it gets 17 percent. Nicole Sawaya, alone among the managers, presented a plan saying she would cut that 17 percent to make up for lost CPB funds, if Coonrod carried out his threat.

Because Nicole Sawaya would not cut the Pacifica share (rather then staff in that revised budget) she was fired. So what we have is a close collusion with the current Pacifica leadership and CPB, the resistance of one courageous station manager, and the present crisis.

The other thing to say is simply this. Lew Hill would spin in his grave if he knew that the head of a federal agency was the head of Pacifica. I don't care what Mary Frances Berry did in the past, we have to look at who and what people are. She is a Clinton appointee, a consummate Washington insider, to have such a person as head of a counter-cultural independent media organization, makes absolutely no sense. Its a total contradiction.

What's happened, I believed is that a flying wedge came from Washington, taking advantage of a structural weakness of Pacifica, that has always been there. There's always been a structural weakness, which is its lack of accountability to the communities it serves, not only to the subscribers and the listeners but the social movements such as peace, labor, civil rights, which it serves. Lew Hill was worried about a takeover by a small group, well Lew Hill, guess what? It's happened.

This crisis has got to be resolved by a restructuring of Pacifica so it's Democratic and really accountable to the people that it serves. Pacifica's asset, the licenses, (are probably) worth $200,000,000 to $300,000,000. Anybody would be tempted by that amount of money, I would be. The only way you can keep them honest is if they are accountable to their communities and that change ultimately has to happen.

Thank you.

Moderator: If you have any questions for Peter Franck.

Questions:

Gary: Could you just go over again because I think it's important that Radio Marti connection, I didn't quite catch that.

Peter: From the Corporation for Public Broadcasting's Web page here is the "Bio" of Robert Coonrod. Prior to joining the CPB, Mr. Coonrod was deputy director of Voice of America, the Global Radio and Television Network. He oversaw VOA, The office of Cuba Broadcasting, both Radio and TV Marti and Worldnet television. I'm skipping a little bit. He's been with USIA since 1967. He's also held senior positions in USIA's bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.”

Now, let me skip ahead to National Public Radio, because that's part of it. Kevin Close, the new president of NPR, again from their Web page: “Before joining NPR, he served as Director of the US International Broadcasting Bureau in Washington, he managed the US Government's Global Radio and Television Services with studios and stations worldwide. Under Close's leadership RFE, Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty forged new Broadcast partnerships with newly Independent Radio Stations in Central Europe and Russia.”

So these two people, who are the heads of the two parts of the Public Broadcasting System, made their career in the US Government's Overseas Propaganda Arm. The solution to the current problem is to get back to understanding that this is listener-sponsored radio and acting in terms as listener-sponsored radio and realizing that that's very different from Government radio and there's got to be a separation.

Michael: I'm Michael Turner Thomas, I'm formerly the black guy with Free Radio Berkeley. I realize what's going on especially with Micro Power being shut down, that KPFK is the last voice we have. What's going on now is just an obvious Big Brother push, you know it's obvious to all of us here today. I must say I'm reluctant to really embrace KPFK because I see the same gate-keeping attitudes that throughout communication permeating within this and I mean the only place Black men are over represented in this Country is in Prison. I certainly do not want Jesse, the logo corporate, Ventura president, like the corporate fascist media is pushing right now. So how can you expect us to really jump on this bandwagon when you really haven't shown the community support, especially from where I'm from?

Peter: That's the reason that it has to be open to the whole community. I'll tell you we can really thank the leadership of Pacifica. If you would have heard the Hip-hop section of the Joan Bias concert last Friday night. Or seen the diversity of people out in front of KPFA everyday and every night, this will open things up in a really wonderful way and we've got to make sure it stays that way.


PETER FRANCK
1999
2018 UPDATE: Peter Franck continues to be involved in ongoing discussions. His website is
culturelaw.com



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 300 affiliate stations.





DISCLAIMER: This is not an official Pacifica Foundation website nor an official website of any of the five Pacifica Radio Stations (KPFA Radio, KPFK Radio, KPFT Radio, WBAI Radio, WPFW Radio). Opinions and facts alleged on this site belong to the author(s) of the website only and should NOT be assumed to be true or to reflect the editorial stance or policy of the Pacifica Foundation, or any of the five Pacifica Radio Stations (KPFA Radio, KPFK Radio, KPFT Radio, WBAI Radio, WPFW Radio), or the opinions of its management, Pacifica National Board, station staff or other listener members.






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Daniel's recommendations for

Pacifica in the 1990s


The history we live with

Maria Gilardin began as a volunteer in the KPFA news department in 1982. She was co-founder of the women's department and became KPFA's promotion and development director. In 1993, as the hijacker regime began its seven-year-long takeover, Gilardin was banned by the Pacifica National Board from all Pacifica stations. After losing her voice on KPFA she founded TUC Radio, a weekly national radio program on globalization, local resistance, and Native Nations.

In this account, written 2001, Gilardin mentions a group then known as "
Save KPFA." That name was later stolen and appropriated by the very ones who collaborated in the hijacking of the station. Although most of the persons in this article are no longer at Pacifica, a number of them are, and along with some more recent additions, they form the current gatekeeper clique, today's "SaveKPFA." This is the history we are still living with in 2016.



Pacifica in the 1990s

by Maria Gilardin
June 2001

Jeff Blankfort and I were the recipients in the annual San Francisco Bay Guardian "Best Of" awards of 1999. Thus ended - we thought - a several year long period in which the efforts of
Save KPFA and Take Back KPFA were belittled by Pacifica managers and certain KPFA staff members as the work of just two people.

The story of the early history of resistance to the long drawn out execution of Pacifica's dream, mission and reality includes the over 200 listeners who met at Berkeley's Ashkenaz to prevent the dismissal of the community programmers on KPFA in January, 1993. That gathering followed a tension-filled meeting, held in the pouring rain, (in what then was the empty office next to the station which later became Pacifica's headquarters). That January night, attended by more than 150 people, staff members, backed by supporters from the community, stepped to the microphone to denounce the regime of then general manager Pat Scott and with that energy, saved the 7-8 pm weekday programs for just another three years, and left Salniker with no choice but to remove Scott from the job. But as we will see later, she would come back with a vengeance Even though the cancellation of Living on Indian time, the women's, labor and Pacific Islander's, gay-lesbian programs and many more was protested by an even larger group of listeners, and this time, by some members of staff, they were not rescinded after the purge of August, 1995. The dismissal of Mama O'Shea and of Bill Mandel, in May of that year, also led to large demonstrations - but to no avail. And some key members of the paid staff sided openly with the management's decisions.

The group of people who early on saw the systematic nature of the shift in Pacifica was always fairly small. In an ironic clash of Pacifica National rhetoric and reality the early opponents of Pacifica were almost all African-Americans.

When Pacifica held its Spring Board meeting in February 1993 at Berkeley's posh Claremont Hotel a huge delegation arrived from KPFK in Los Angeles. One contingent represented the "African Mental Liberation" program that brought African history by African scholars to the air. It had come under attack for alleged anti-semitic remarks. The other group, also African-Americans, included Ron Wilkins, a former National Board member and host of a "Continent to Continent," a program on KPFK that dealt with current African history and politics. They carried banners into the meeting room with slogans such as: "Liberation radio, Yes, Plantation Radio, No!"

At that board meeting representatives from the KPFK contingent, Jeff and I, and WBAI program director Samori Marksman met. The atmosphere was one of defiance. Pat Scott had made herself so unpopular with KPFA staff that it seemed just a matter of time that she would be forced to leave. Samori, as he continued to do until his death, would personally protect WBAI with his negotiating skills, courage and strong personal sense of direction. Even if there had been a method of pulling it off, there seemed no desire or need to come up with a "national" plan of resistance. We wished each other luck and promised to stay in touch. Little did we know that the first purges were to begin only three months later.

One of the things that made me unpopular with the Pacifica National Board (PNB) was my insistence on access to the books. A friend had helped me analyze the annual reports of the previous four years and we found a disturbing trend. Pacifica had begun building an ever expanding central office, using funds from stations to increase the pay of national officers by several thousands of dollars each, while claiming in union negotiations that there was no money to adequately pay station staff.

Legal and consultants' fees were going up. The 990 tax forms showed $145,000 in fund-raising expenses for KPFA that were not explained. What were those expenses for?, I asked in my three minute presentation at the February 1993 board meeting. And why did Pacifica National change their accounting procedure to disguise the rising cost of management?

Unexpectedly the controller, Sandra Rosas, jumped up from her seat at the board table and shouted: "Are you accusing me of fraud?" I had not used the words. So her response seemed an admission. And today, eight years later, we still have not seen the books and she has been in charge all that time.

At the February '93 board meeting I was told that I had to wait until the next board meeting for answers to my question. And so I submitted my list with all the other public comment contributions to the board's chair, Jack O'Dell.

I sensed that something unexpected would occur when I entered the board meeting in Los Angeles in June of 1993 to pick up my answers. I found my questions had been omitted from the minutes of the public comment section. At the board table Pat Scott started whispering to David Salniker. Chairman Jack O'Dell, who had promised both Jeff Blankfort and myself that we would have time to make personal statements (in addition to reading prepared statements from Take Back KPFA, and the staff, respectively) adjourned the meeting before I was allowed to speak on the issue of Pacifica's faulty financials.

My shouted protest was drowned out in the bustle of people leaving the room. Later Pat Scott and Marci Lockwood claimed that I had blocked the door and kicked a board member. Dozens of people knew that that was untrue. A video taken by a former KPFK volunteer was later shown at La Pena . I could be seen standing to the side of the door with an armful of papers pleading with people not to leave.

Three days later I received a letter signed by Jack O'Dell banning me from all Pacifica stations for threatening the board with violence. Five others, including Jeff, Sue Supriano, (a long-time KPFA programmer), and Jeff, were banned from speaking at future meetings of the board. A letter to Chairman Jack O'Dell, requesting a hearing and the due process that Pacifica ostensibly supported, was summarily rejected.

In hindsight that was the beginning of an era of bannings and selective claims of violence with which to discredit the critics and to spin stories for the media or the courts.

As of this writing over 300 people have been banned from the five Pacifica stations and the numbers rising weekly at WBAI. The purges at KPFA in 1995, when more than 60 programmers were fired, many of them community activists, brought out more than 400 angry listeners at two successive meetings at the No. Berkeley Senior Center. With very few exceptions, staff at KPFA did not support the fired unpaid staff. It is no secret that Philip Maldari was among those in favor of the dismissals - he said so on the air.

Subsequently, in a move that turned out to be a serious mistake, KPFA's paid staff voted to leave the United Electrical Workers and join another union, the Communication Workers of America. To the dismay of the UE union members at WBAI they then voted to exclude the unpaid staff from the union contract while WBAI workers fought up to the NLRB to keep union representation for unpaid staff.

Those two actions created a rift between paid and unpaid staff that exists to this day. The paid staff also relinquished the influence that the UE contract provided in terms of the management of the station (managers had to take pay cut before staff would be laid off) and voted for the first time in KPFA labor history to sign a no-strike clause.

All along Take Back KPFA and listeners who were aware of the changes in the union contract tried to influence staff and shop stewards to stay in unity with WBAI and to not abandon the unpaid staff - but again, it was to no avail. In a surreal episode of parallel universes, most of KPFA paid staff made an appearance at the Pacifica National Board meeting in Oakland in June of 1997.

We had a huge picket line outside the hotel, and packed the audience for the public comment session. KPFA staff filed in, wearing new CWA T-shirts, and then filed right out again after Kris Welch said a few words about their contract negotiations. We ran after them and pleaded with them to stay. That session was extremely important, Mary Frances Berry was chosen as Pat Scott's successor. Roberta Brooks claimed that the board had already voted to exclude the LAB [Local Advisory Board] representatives from the National Board. Jeff Blankfort had taped that preceding meeting and was able to prove that she was mistaken, if not lying. It would take Pacifica National two more years to remove the LAB members.

To recount all major events up to today with this level of detail would fill the pages of the Folio. The examples above are simply there to make a point - or two. The most sinister aspect is the intent, planning, and criminal energy expended on this by Pacifica National. The plan to execute Pacifica and the method by which to do it was first outlined in the Strategic Plan of 1992; preparations took at least four years. The Strategic Plan began under David Salniker with Dick Bunce, (a former editor of the Socialist Review!) as the co-author with now departed Gail Christian, continued under Pat Scott to Mary Frances Berry, Lynn Chadwick, Bessie Wash and their numerous helpers.

What is frightening is that The Plan survived a changing cast of characters and was expanded into a Five-Year Plan which was crafted in a series of board meetings that were described as "retreats.". They all operated in the same fashion: centralization of the organization and of money, destruction of programming and of unions, firing and banning of staff, suspension of free speech, use of armed force, and the replacement of listeners.

If all this were reported from a Central American Country, or an African country, we would recognize it immediately for what it is: the wholesale destruction of a society, colonialism, imperialism, or structural adjustment; and we might see a national movement of resistance to these policies and of support of the people of that country. Applied internally we might use some of the same words to define it. The colonizing of the voice of Pacifica. But we do have a more exact term to use: counter-intelligence. If COINTELPRO was used against the American Indian Movement, the Black Panthers, the Anti Apartheid Movement, Earth First - why would we expect Pacifica to be exempt?

The situation reminds me of the story of the burning books told by Bertolt Brecht in exile. Brecht, whose own books went up in flames, wrote about the anguish of a writer whose books were left unburned by the Nazis. "Was I not also telling the truth, did I not show courage in face of suppression?" he has that writer say. "Why do you discredit me by not burning my books?"

Pacifica was certainly challenging power and some voices still do at KPFA and WBAI. It was certainly a deserving target for a COINTELPRO action and remains that today. If not for the present reality of some of the programming, then at least for the dormant potential to really be a voice of the voiceless, as intended by the founders.

All these elements are finally clear to see and recognized by most listeners and even by a large number of programming staff. I'm using the word "even" not because I want to be unkind. The people most acted upon, most targeted, most made collaborators in their own demise are almost always the last to recognize the pattern and its systematic nature.

The listeners however, even without knowing many of the details that the gag rule and the acquiescence to the gag rule by so many staff members for so long concealed from them, became alarmed by the programming and format changes. They also wanted to know where their money went and became furious at the abuse of funds and the prospect that those bent on destroying Pacifica, which includes almost all members of the Pacifica's National "unit" were so handsomely paid for their work.

You may agree with the line of reasoning so far but still not be willing to take the next step. You may say that Pacifica indeed was deserving to be targeted by a COINTELPRO operation but, since the most serious onslaught came while the Democrats held state power, during the Clinton years, it could not have been a government program since Democrats don't do such things.

The flurry of recent efforts to personalize the Pacifica National Board members, to meet with them and talk, is an expression of that mind set. The assumption that they are just misguided persons who will see the light if spoken to reasonably is promoted by many. What is overlooked is that the effort to initiate these meetings is made in most cases by the other side and that they are making any such events into political hay.

After Dan Siegel, the lawyer for the LAB suit, talked KPFK LAB member David Adelson into coming to Washington to meet with John Murdock, and his boss Daly Temchine, Ken Ford, and Bessie Wash; Pacifica National violated a promise to keep this meeting confidential by issuing a press release that hit the Houston Board meeting like a bomb shell, claiming "substantive negotiations" had occurred.

Pacifica's lawyer, John Rappaport, used the meeting in the hearing before the judge to issue a temporary restraining order to keep Pacifica books from being moved from Los Angeles to Washington. He told the judge that substantive negotiations were occurring, and that there was no need to stop the transfer of records. The judge denied the temporary restraining order. The books are now in Washington in the hands of a person hired by Pacifica National. He claims they are in such bad order that he needs to fix them.

Philip Maldari's meeting, in February 2001, with Pat Scott, David Salniker, Roberta Brooks, Jack O'Dell, Ying Lee Kelly, and Judge Jenny Rhine falls into the same category. He called for it without consulting with staff or the LAB. Apparently nobody else participated in it. To this day we are not sure what exactly was discussed because Philip has not reported to anybody except for the bare essentials.

Many KPFA LAB members have resisted even discussing this meeting on the LABs agenda. Vociferous voices came out asserting that Philip has the right to freely assemble and that it would be something like an inquisition to ask him to report to the LAB. The idea was floated that two LAB members should see Philip and talk to him. My name came up as a candidate for that delegation. I resisted it because I do not see the need for a filter. The report should be made directly. The listeners have a right to hear the report as well, directly. How would Philip ever be fairly represented if he was not speaking directly?

My sense of urgency around the issues of those two meetings comes from personal conviction that we are at a very crucial point in the battle with Pacifica. After ten years of skirmishes - most of which we lost - we may see the end of it all - probably even before the end of this year. The lawsuits, especially the listener's suit, have defined the issues in a sharp and clear light: This Pacifica National Board is illegitimate with only three exceptions, and the listeners have standing to demand the return of "their" network. Legally, ethically, and based on Pacifica's mission, the outcome in the courts should be a victory. However we can't be sure of that. In the pro-corporate neo-liberal world Pacifica is a potential danger to the status quo. The suit might set a precedent for other anti corporate suits. The famous, long disused question: "Quo warranto? By what authority?" that is part of the essence of the listeners suit and that was once a rallying concept of the populist movement, may not be allowed into the public discourse again.

So, sadly enough, we need to be prepared not just for victory but for defeat, at least in the courts. Of course that does not have to be the end of it by any means. We can still protect Pacifica. But we need to come up with a common strategy among all five stations and we need to put the question to the staffs at all the stations whether they want to be on the side of Pacifica National or with the communities they are serving. We don't even have to spell out in great detail what serving the community might mean. A few programmers are already doing an excellent job of it. If we manage to have truly open, democratic structures that will work itself out.

The problem in doing this is compounded by the fact that WPFW in Washington DC, which censors Democracy Now on a regular basis, and KPFT in Houston are Pacifica in name and in legal ownership only, having long ago become largely music stations--jazz in DC and Country Western in Texas. And in Los Angeles, General Manager Mark Schubb, backed by Marc Cooper, rules the station like a petty dictator.

The simple question, that seems too hard to answer for many staff members at KPFA and WBAI, is: will they stand up to Pacifica National? Will they refuse to be gagged, will they support their fired colleagues, will they go on strike? Are they willing to defend more than their jobs? Are they willing to defend Pacifica even if it means that they lose their jobs? How many are willing to recognize that all these potential sacrifices are really very small compared to the prospect of finding the SOLD sign pinned to the door one day?

And I guess the argument returns again to the question of how serious all this really is and whether or not there are just a few misguided individuals on the National Board who can be talked into seeing their errors.

Take John Murdock for example. How reasonable he sounded in the interview with Juan Gonzales. Is he the same man who just re-wrote the bylaws, making it possible to sell with ease not just one, but at least two of the stations, pocket a hefty commission for his services and disburse the funds donated by listeners to another organization? This is the blueprint for the "legal" dissolution of Pacifica, the administrative execution, far worse than previous schemes developed by Mary Frances Berry. She simply suggested to sell KPFA or WBAI or both, and buy a string of radio stations in the South. Murdock's position enables the end of Pacifica as an institution.

Far from abandoning the bylaws that elicited an overwhelming amount of thoughtful and spirited negative comments, Murdock, at this very moment, is moving forward with a "process" by which the LABS and station managers are ordered to take part in a discussion. They are made complicit in the re-writing of the most precious asset, the old bylaws of Pacifica, butchered and amended but with the basic premise that Pacifica needs to survive as an institution still intact.

Murdock's process focuses on changes or amendments to his new bylaws. LABs should not become complicit in a process whose outcome is preordained. And, on the topic of complicity, this same Murdock offered to Dan Siegel power sharing of 15 LAB and 15 nationally appointed members in their recent meeting in Washington, (an offer that was refused).

Revisiting for a moment Philip Maldari's meeting. The little we know about it is that the idea of a local management agreement for KPFA came up. KPFA staff who spoke to Philip briefly thought that his intent was to find a way to rescue KPFA from a collapse of the Pacifica system. Since Pat Scott put the deed to the building in Pacifica's name a rental agreement would need to be entered into.

In terms of supervision and control of staff and programming, I was told that Philip wanted to find out if there might be a way of making KPFA independent from Pacifica. The same staff members who gave me this information expressed surprise that Philip appears so divorced from the analysis of and debate over the role of the current Pacifica leadership as well as the role of the very people he is now asking for help, to have taken that step.

First of all any local management agreement is still just another way of destroying Pacifica. To take the strongest station away from the others has the same effect as a sale. It just does not look as brutal. By now the majority of the people organizing to protect "their" station are clear on the concept that Pacifica National is the adversary and that the five-station federation needs to be saved. Secondly the fact that the meeting took place at all confirms that none of the old guard ever went away. After having set in motion the events that now bring Pacifica to the brink of destruction, they are still partners in this game: Roberta Brooks and Ying Lee Kelly represent the tie in to the Democratic party as staff people for Ron Dellums. Brooks initiated the removal of the LAB members from the PNB. Jack O'Dell, once a member of the Communist Party, was dropped by Martin Luther King from his staff after John Kennedy, acting on the advice of J Edgar Hoover, told him to get rid of him. Somewhere along the line he had become acceptable to State Power and presided, in defiance of all term limits, as Chair of the PNB only to resign in 1997 in favor of Mary Frances Berry.

David Salniker groomed Pat Scott, while she served for several years on the Local Advisory Board [LAB], to become his successor when he moved up to become the Pacifica Executive director. He talked the staff into accepting her as manager when she caught herself in contradictions in her interview with staff and listed among her credentials the fact that she had helped dissolve the Berkeley CO-OP. When the KPFA staff finally succeeded in getting rid of her as manager, Salniker created a job for her as a lobbyist in Washington from which he was to later move her into the position of Executive Director when he took over directorship of the Tides Foundation.

Scott herself, probably the most hated manager KPFA has had, disappeared into the Washington circuit for almost a year and created her bonds with the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB). She returned to become the most destructive Pacifica Executive Director ever: In 1994, on the CPB task force, she brought down the heavy hand of the market on all recipients of CPB funding. Purges began at WPFW that same year.

In 1995 she fired KPFK management, and seized control of the books. She hired consultants and retained the services of David Giovannoni who continues to advise to this day, that programming needs to be mainstreamed in order to comply with the funding guidelines she and Lynn Chadwick voted for on the CPB task force.

In 1995 Pat Scott began the successful campaign against the unions at KPFK and KPFA, hiring the American Consulting Group, a national union-busting firm. The WBAI union took a principled stand and escaped. To this day Pacifica is following ACG's advice: The ACG instructs employers to make claims that staff and union members are violent - even if those claims are false, and to threaten or bribe people of color into collaborating with management. These techniques are laid out in their training film.

Also in 1995, Pat Scott finally felt strong enough to request major purges of programmers and whole programming departments at KPFA. She closed all finance committee meeting on the PNB to the public - in direct violation of CPB funding rules, and she issued the famous: "My way or the highway memo" announcing vast changes in management of the foundation, advising LAB members who disagreed to resign.

When Pat Scott had members of the audience removed from Pacifica National Board meetings later that year, an investigator from the CPB's Inspector General's office, Brian McConnville, looked into Pacifica's possible violations of CPB guidelines. 17 days after beginning the investigation, and after Pacifica's lawyer called his boss, McConnville was fired. After failing to get any satisfaction from Chair Jack O'Dell, Take Back KPFA filed a formal complaint with the CPB. Over a year later, on the eve of recommending defunding of Pacifica for numerous violations of federal communications law and CPB regulations, as he told Jeff Blankfort, the Deputy-Inspector General Mike Donavan, was fired as well, and his office would give us no forwarding phone or address. When the next Inspector General finally managed to come out with a critical report even that was whitewashed by the CPB Board that brushed its critical aspects aside and expressed confidence in the job that Pat Scott and Jack O'Dell were doing.

When Scott announced her retirement, CPB President Robert Coonrod, who formerly headed both the Voice of America and Radio Marti, praised Scott for the transformation she had effected in Pacifica. That Scott, who also admitted to having been a member of the Communist Party, had received a commendation from such a source, rekindled suspicions of a COINTELPRO operation.

Add to this the curious fact that the presence of two former members of the US Communist Party at the head of Pacifica, O'Dell as well as Scott, elicited not a word of Red-baiting from Capitol Hill. To borrow a title from A. Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, it seems like a case of "The Dog That Didn't Bark in the Night."

Former PNN news director Dan Coughlin's recent talk at a fundraiser for investigative reporting added a chilling new dimension. He said Lynn Chadwick would call the President of the CPB , Robert Coonrod "Uncle Bob" and she claimed that now that KPFA was in trouble the CPB would shell out some money to see the matter through. The "trouble" of course being the occupation of the station by police and the arrest of staff. Dan was careful to note that he did not know if that money ever came through but in the light of the earlier firings of CPB inspectors it is a story that makes sense in an eerie way.

If after reading this far, you still do not agree with my theory that this really is a government operation, I hope you will at least entertain the thought that the difference of opinion and intent, between listeners and much of the staff on one side, and the PNB and Pacifica National on the other side, could not be larger. Many new people have recently joined the battle for the survival of Pacifica recently and this ought to be our best time ever.

We now have links from station to station; we have eloquent speakers and we have a new, wider appeal to the public-at-large. But with the influx of new people there will invariably be many who were not witnesses to the systematic, long term dismemberment of Pacifica; who think it is just a couple of people gone mad or astray. Those of us who know the history have a responsibility to pass it on.

MARIA GILARDIN
June 2001


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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


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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




























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Questions from a KPFA member

about
United for Community Radio (UCR)



"I think now is an important time to say why NOT to dissolve Pacifica. I think even neutral folks are wondering about doing it." -- Virginia Browning, United for Community Radio (UCR)


In this essay Virginia responds to an email from a KPFA 94.1 FM listener-member who wonders about the course the station should take: Should KPFA accept underwriting? Should it break off from the Pacifica network?




Issues at KPFA & Pacifica

by Virginia Browning,
United for Community Radio


Thank you for your email to UCR. I appreciate your thoughtful questions.

I'm "one of the UCR 9," Virginia Browning, running for the board. I happen to be answering the UCR's email, but the views below are only mine. I'll forward your email to the other candidates.

I started at a community radio station in Salt Lake City when I was young, when it was just beginning. It was very exciting. Opportunities were wide open to have quite radical viewpoints on the air in that somewhat conservative region. I interviewed Norman Solomon for example -- he had written about atomic testing, which was very relevant to Utahns.

In recent years, that station has started accepting underwriting. Like so many community stations across the country, KRCL, while it has a few progressive shows or parts of shows, is mostly music and not as progressive as it once was. Is this related to its now accepting underwriting? I don't know for sure.

If a small station starts to accept a nice steady significant amount of money from one entity, there is such a temptation to do the bidding of that entity in shaping the programming. Sometimes that can be informal, maybe only a comment or two. But there can be a huge temptation to simply cut out something that the donor doesn't like, especially if it seems kind of "marginal" (few people may care).

I know that there are differing points of view within the "
United for Community Radio" group about underwriting. A number of us voted on this for a platform point. I didn't vote for this as a platform point, but more of us did than not. I have mixed feelings.

There are good people who think they can control how underwriting is handled. Maybe they can. The fact is, like so many wide-ranging conversations we could be having at KPFA, this one isn't encouraged to be had in a thoughtful, public way. Wouldn't that be great?

There are Pacifica affiliates, community stations across the country, who have presented a plan for Pacifica to be a kind of broker to find good "clean" underwriters and match them with the over 150 stations. I think very good people are behind this plan. However, the most recent version of this plan was but a sketch. It had almost no guidelines to ensure that the underwriting would not influence the viewpoints on the air. The Pacifica National Board voted not to accept this plan until details were developed. I agree with that decision.

I actually am interested to know how other stations handle this, especially ones who think they are doing it successfully. I believe one of the managers at KRCL where I started, is famous now across the country as a strong advocate for truly good, open, accessible, community radio. Last I looked, she just started managing a station in Moab Utah, which I noted DOES accept underwriting. I was going to write to her. I'd love to know more about the guidelines used by the stations to which you refer in your email.

As for breaking KPFA away from Pacifica: I'm not ready to go there. Indeed, Pacifica is in big trouble in many ways. Part of the reason however, is a hypocrisy of some of our local KPFA major players (some who have been on the national board for years) in advocating for draconian cuts at other stations and almost none at KPFA. Some of our opponents in this election at the same time were the ones who voted to saddle the New York station, WBAI, with a crippling contract for transmitting. New York to be sure has its own problems, but only when some allied with UCR were in power did New York finally get rid of some who were fairly actively destroying the station. There are still problems with the New York station, but I think there are other, even drastic, measures that could be taken before the ultimate drastic one of selling the New York license forever. Media is certainly changing -- radio is changing! But the potential for a radical network such as Pacifica could be is fairly unique. Internet? Sure! But who owns that, ultimately? I'm not ready to let go of the potential that Pacifica holds.

Some who want KPFA broken away have proven to me anyway that even if they had access to the millions of dollars they may think they would have with the sale of the New York license, that they would not use it to provide more equitable access to the air at KPFA to movements for change, but would probably hire more of their friends whom they think know radio better than anyone else.

Brian Edwards-Tiekert, for example, is an incredibly talented host and interviewer. Few can match his perhaps "innate" ability. However, I believe he has more radical perspectives on his show than he might otherwise because of movement from a community that he feels compelled to attend to. When the Occupy movement blossomed, he used his little power-spot for a sound-byte at Occupy Oakland of some facilitators saying "ok, now everyone stand up," and re-thinking something "ok everyone sit down." It was a soundbyte that signified nothing. But Brian, like 90-some percent of the national media at that juncture then opined "they sound like they don't know what they want." I attended some Occupy events. Friends who could attended even more. The stand-up/sit-down segment symbolized nothing except an opportunity for media to squelch a blossoming of hope. Many wonderful conversations occurred at Occupy events. Apex Express, a usually excellently-produced show run by volunteers at KPFA (who don't even get invited to regular KPFA staff meetings with Brian and his crew), produced another Occupy show that was a careful, artistic collage of many exciting times in the Occupy days.

Brian, for all his talent, would do well to use most of it to train other people. Otherwise, he and his group will use any excess money to hire paid staff and close out more community, unless pressured to do otherwise.

And the pressure is killing some of us -- it has NOT been easy to stand against these cronies, yet some members of our UCR group are still standing for more radical views than will likely be filtered in at a set pace designed by the other side if they get even more money to do their thing. I don't find this a winning formula for a better world.

Right now if you want to hear an alternative viewpoint about many of the countries in Africa which are being exploited at a terrifying rate, you will not hear them on the regular KPFA weekday news. You may hear them from
Ann Garrison on the weekend news (unpaid staff), or by one of the hosts relegated to the 3pm or 3:30 weekday slot, or by Hardknock Radio or Flashpoints or Project Censored. KPFA pays for 2 corporate newswires and uses FSN news, an entity that brags about creating "Video News Releases" (VNRs) -- segments made to look like news but that are actually made by PR firms for corporate propaganda.

The above policy (the breakup of Pacifica) is the policy created by those who will benefit if Pacifica is broken up.

I agree about the fund drives. I know they could be much better. Again, a wide-ranging discussion by those who may have some great ideas could help with this. I'm sorry to bring Brian up so much, but he's a major player in the way it's done now, as you can probably hear because he's on a great deal of the time within each fund drive (and paid to do it).

Thank you for writing!

Again, remember, these are my views only. I'll forward your email to other candidates.

VIRGINIA BROWNING
November 2, 2015


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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. The Pacifica network also has about 160 affiliate stations.





















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