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Thursday, 19 November 2009 |
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MEDIA ADVISORY
November 17, 2009
WHO: Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation
WHAT: Markup and Committee Vote on S 592, The Local Community Radio Act
(LCRA)
WHEN: Thursday, November 19, 2009, at 10 a.m.
WHERE: Senate Russell Building, Room 293, Washington, D.C.
WHY: The Local Community Radio Act would allow for hundreds of new,
non-commercial radio stations around the country. These independent
community stations are run by non-profit organizations such as schools,
churches, emergency responders, and neighborhood groups.
The
Local Community Radio Act, co-sponsored by Senator Maria Cantwell
(D-WA) and Senator John McCain (R-AZ), has passed the Senate Committee
twice before. However, this time the Senate bill is accompanied by a
House version of the bill, HR 1147, which recently passed the House
Subcommittee on Communications, Technology and the Internet and the
House Energy and Commerce Committee for the first time. This greatly
increases the Act’s chances for passage in this legislative session. |
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Thursday, 19 November 2009 |
The Technical and Training Organizer will work in conjunction with our
Station Support Coordinator and Community Radio Organizer to provide
engineering and station construction support to new and existing
participatory radio stations. Candidates must be self-motivated and
capable of working in collaborative settings with volunteers, interns
and other staff.
The demystification of radio technologies and
FCC processes is central to Prometheus’s work. Therefore, we are
looking for a person who is a both a skilled technician and an
enthusiastic trainer. This organizer is expected to create an
environment where people who are new to radio can enjoy learning
through collaboration and skill-sharing. This is an exciting position
for someone who values sharing knowledge, thinking big, and building
stuff. READ THE FULL JOB ANNOUNCEMENT
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Monday, 16 November 2009 |
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Building on the
unanimous passage out of the Energy & Commerce Committee in the
House of Representatives, the Senate version of the legislation will be
moving forward this week. On Thursday, November 19 the Committee on
Commerce, Science, & Transportation will vote on the Local
Community Radio Act, taking an important step forward towards passage.
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Wednesday, 28 October 2009 |
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Cory Fischer-Hoffman, Campaign Director of the Prometheus Radio Project, will be joined by Mike Doyle (D-PA) via satellite to speak about Low Power FM and the Local Community Radio Act on Democracy Now! this morning at 8:00 AM. Stream it live or listen to it on NYC's Pacifica Radio WBAI 99.5.
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Thursday, 15 October 2009 |
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Today, the Committee on Energy and Commerce voted unanimously in favor
of the Local Community Radio Act. We anticipate the bill will move
swiftly to a vote before the full House. Read More.
Please call your representative today to say it’s time to pass the Local Community Act, HR 1147!
Go to www.freepress.net/lpfm/cosponsors
and put in your zip code. You will be told where your rep stands, what
their phone number is, and given some talking points. It is so easy!
Can you give Prometheus $10-100 to help us win a victory for community radio?
Donations like yours make a big difference in our ability to expand
community radio to hundreds more communities. Thank you thank you! |
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Wednesday, 14 October 2009 |
Notice of Committee Markup
WHO: Committee on Energy and Commerce
WHAT: Markup of H.R. 1147, the Local Community Radio Act
WHEN: Thursday, October 15, 2009, at 10 a.m.
WHERE: 2123 Rayburn House Office Building,
Washington, D.C.
Last week, we were thrilled when the Local
Community Radio Act of 2009 (H.R. 1147) passed out of the House Subcommittee on
Communications, Technology, and the Internet by voice vote.
Tomorrow, community radio advocates may have more
to celebrate. The full House Energy and Commerce Committee will vote on the
Local Community Radio Act on Thursday, October 15 at 10 a.m.
After years of fighting to expand people’s
access to the airwaves, community radio advocates are finally seeing the fruits
of our labor. This is the farthest the bill has come since it was first
introduced in 2005, bringing hundreds of communities around the country one huge
step closer to running their own radio stations.
The Energy and Commerce Committee is chaired by longtime LPFM
supporter Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA). After the
Committee markup, we expect the Local Community Radio Act to move swiftly
toward a full House vote.
Community radio needs your support more than
ever. Please call your representative today to say it’s time to pass the Local
Community Act!
Contact:
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
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Thursday, 08 October 2009 |
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This morning, the House Subcommittee on Communications, Technology and the Internet passed the Local Community Radio Act (H.R. 1147) in a near unanimous 15 to 1 vote.
 "All I can say is, it's about time," commented Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-CA), a co-sponsor of the bill.
The bipartisan bill gained the support of former LPFM doubters, including Rep. Cliff Stearns (R-FL), a former lead co-sponsor of anti-LPFM legislation, Rep. Greg Walden (R-OR), the only former broadcaster in Congress, and Rep. John Dingell (D-MI), who called for a study of LPFM interference in 2000.
H.R. 1147 is now poised to move to the full Commerce Committee, chaired by longtime LPFM supporter Rep. Waxman (D-CA). Read More. Support Prometheus!
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Wednesday, 07 October 2009 |
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TODAY Congress will debate the Local Community Radio Act (H.R. 1147) on Thursday, Oct 8 at 10 am, in the House Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet.
The Local Community Radio Act would allow the FCC to license hundreds of new low power non-commercial radio stations nationwide.
Rep. Mike Doyle (D-PA) reaffirmed his support for the Local Community Radio Act to an enthusiastic crowd at the Future of Music Coalition Policy Summit on Tuesday, calling it “our Christmas present this year.” Rep. Doyle has been leading the push for Low Power FM in Congress, along with lead co-sponsor Rep. Lee Terry (R-NE).
This is closest the bill has ever been to passage. We need your help! Contact your representative and tell them to SUPPORT LOCAL COMMUNITY RADIO! TAKE ACTION NOW!
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Wednesday, 07 October 2009 |
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Bill Would Expand Community Radio to Hundreds of Cities Washington, DC – A bipartisan bill to expand community radio has been scheduled for a vote by Chairman Rick Boucher (D-VA) on Thursday at 10 AM, in the House Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet. The Local Community Radio Act would allow the FCC to license hundreds of new low power non-commercial radio stations nationwide. Most communities, especially large cities, have had severely limited opportunities to apply for these new radio licenses. Rep. Mike Doyle (D-PA) reaffirmed his support for the Local Community Radio Act to an enthusiastic crowd at the Future of Music Coalition Policy Summit on Tuesday, calling it “our Christmas present this year.” Rep. Doyle has been leading the push for Low Power FM in Congress, along with lead co-sponsor Rep. Lee Terry (R-NE). Independent musicians have been longtime supporters of Low Power FM as a venue to share their music. “We’d like to thank Congressmen Doyle, Boucher, Waxman and all Congressional supporters of low power radio. The hard work of these leaders and their staff to bring this legislation to a vote will yield great results for America’s local media landscape,” said Pete Tridish, founding member of Prometheus Radio Project. The Local Community Radio Act reverses legislation from 2000 that limited the FCC's authority to license low power radio. Broadcasters claimed that low power radio would cause interference, but a Congressionally mandated study later showed that low power stations (which operate at 100 watts or less) do not interfere with full power stations. "Thousands of communities could finally have a chance to have their own radio station,” said Cory Fischer-Hoffman, Campaign Director for the Prometheus Radio Project. "We hear from schools, churches, community groups, emergency responders, and local governments who want a local forum for news and information. They're eager for this opportunity." Contact your Representative and tell them to support local community radio!
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Thursday, 17 September 2009 |
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For Immediate Release: New FCC Commissioners Unanimously Support the Local
Community Radio Act
Bipartisan bill would expand low power radio
Contact:
Cory Fischer-Hoffman, Prometheus Radio Project (610) 761-5414
Pete Tridish, Prometheus Radio Project (215) 605-9297
September 17, 2009
Washington DC -- In the first Congressional oversight hearing since the
three new FCC Commissioners took office, all five Commissioners endorsed the
Local Community Radio Act HR 1147/ S592, unanimously reaffirming the FCC’s
continued support for the bill.
FCC Chairman Genachowski and Commissioners Baker and Clyburn expressed
support for the Local Community Radio Act in a hearing of the House
Subcommittee on Communications, Technology, and the Internet. Introduced by
Rep. Mike Doyle (PA-14) and Rep. Lee Terry (NE-2) in February, the bill
would repeal a 2000 law that restricts Low Power FM radio (LPFM) radio to
rural areas.
“We are very pleased that the Commission has again voiced their support for
this important bill, which would allow community radio to expand into
thousands of towns, cities and neighborhoods throughout the US,” stated Cory
Fischer-Hoffman, Campaign Director at the Prometheus Radio Project.
This is the third time that the Commission has unanimously requested that
Congress return authority to the FCC to manage “third adjacent channel
restrictions” on Low Power FM radio (LPFM). These restrictions, imposed by
Congress in 2000 in response to concerns that LPFMs could cause interference
to full power stations – limited low power radio to rural areas. Since a
2003 congressionally-mandated engineering study showed that LPFMs do not
harm full power stations, the FCC has told Congress they are ready to move
forward with community radio. The bill now awaits a mark-up in the House
Subcommittee on Telecommunications, Technology and the Internet.
LPFM stations are licensed to government, churches, emergency responders,
and other noncommercial organizations. They have a three-to-five mile range
and a maximum 100 watts of power. Today, over 800 local organizations
operate LPFM stations around the country.
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