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| Mississippi: Shade Tree Radio Owner Wins Honor |
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Copyright 2006 The Sun Herald Distributed by Knight/Ridder
Tribune News Service April 11, 2006 Tuesday SECTION: STATE AND REGIONAL NEWS ACC-NO: 20060411-BI-0411-Shade-tree LENGTH: 416 words HEADLINE: Shade tree radio owner
wins honor: First with Katrina news< BYLINE: Ryan Lafontaine, The
Sun Herald, Biloxi, Miss. BODY: Apr. 11--HANCOCK COUNTY -- As
Hurricane Katrina began loosing its stranglehold on South Mississippi,
dazed locals came crawling out from their hiding places in search of
information. Katrina had plucked power poles
from the ground. Phones were kaput. Static was all that crackled through
battery-powered radios for about two hours. And then, there was this: "Hancock County has suffered
extreme devastation and damage assessments have already begun,"
a voice said through the static on the radio. "The Bay St. Louis
bridge and train bridge have been completely destroyed." It was the voice of 40-year-old
Brice Phillips, who has run a nonprofit radio station in the county
for nearly a decade. Since that afternoon, WQRZ 103.5 FM has remained
on the air 24 hours a day, broadcasting vital information to survivors. Before the storm, Phillips loaded
his van with transmitters and extra equipment and relocated the small
amateur station to the county's emergency operation center in Bay St.
Louis. After the storm, Phillips rigged
his car battery to the station transmitter and began broadcasting search
and rescue information. Weeks later, FEMA officials handed out more
than 3,000 radios to locals, telling them to listen to Phillips for
instructions on where to get food, water and ice. For his service, Phillips has
won the U.S. Small Business Association's Phoenix Award. Since 1998,
the SBA has presented the Phoenix Award to business owners and people
who displayed courage and resourcefulness during a disaster. "It's been an honor,"
Phillips said. "We have made a lot of waves in the industry, and
hopefully that will change things in the way radio stations in the country
service the public." Tish Williams, executive director
of the Hancock County Chamber of Commerce, also will receive a Phoenix
Award for "outstanding contributions to disaster recovery by a
public official." Williams was on the phone almost
as soon as they were working. She secured a temporary office and Internet
access for the chamber, and she made contact with dozens of chambers
nationwide, prompting them to adopt Hancock County. Williams and Phillips will be
honored Thursday during National Small Business Week at the SBA's two-day
conference in Washington. Copyright (c) 2006, The Sun Herald,
Biloxi, Miss. Distributed by Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News. For
information on republishing this content, contact us at (800) 661-2511
(U.S.), (213) 237-4914 (worldwide), fax (213) 237-6515, or e-mail
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. LOAD-DATE: April 13, 2006 |