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By Mary McGlasson
Olney resident Jeff Higgason wants to bring radio back to the people of Olney.
Higgason is coordinator of the
Olney Free Radio Project, a group interested in forming a non-profit
organization committed to developing a low-power FM (LPFM) radio
station in Olney. The radio station would operate in service of the
community by members of the community.
Higgason said the project
is still in its preliminary stages. “We’re right at the very, very
beginning,” he said, and one of the first steps will be to involve
others in planning and organizing the details.
To that end, an open organizational meeting for the project will be held at 7 p.m. Friday at Ophelia’s Cup in Olney.
Higgason
said he’s been working on the radio station for about three months,
after initially looking to start an Internet-based radio station.
However, “There’s so many of those out there right now,” he said. “It’s
hard to be unique.”
Then he heard a news story on National
Public Radio about a low-power FM station in Arizona that was founded
by a Native American tribe in order to teach the younger members of the
tribe the old language.
The story said there is currently a high demand for low-power FM stations, and Higgason thought, “Might as well look into it.”
This
is something he’s wanted to do for about three years, he said, since
his years spent volunteering at WDBX in Carbondale, a thriving
low-power FM community station.
“It was a very positive
experience,” he said, with a “positive atmosphere.” The Carbondale
community “really rallied around WDBX” with support and donations to
keep the station running.
Higgason has hopes that the Olney community can come together to
support a similar project. “I’d like to see it happen,” he said,
adding, “The main thing I’d like to see happen with this project is to
get the community involved in something kind of unique for the area.”
Because
the station will be run by volunteer work, all programming will depend
on the interests of those who put in their time at the station.
“The
neat thing about the community radio station idea is that anybody can
get a radio show,” he said. WDBX had DJs who played everything from
bluegrass to video-game music, he said, and he ran a variety show.
“It wouldn’t be all music, too,” Higgason said. “We’d like to incorporate some local educational programming, too.”
The
station would provide “something for everyone,” he said, and for those
who want to have a show, “If you’ve got an idea, you’re qualified.”
Another
reason for community radio is to give Richland County more variety. “If
you look at the top six radio stations in the U.S., they’re all owned
by one company,” he said. “This kind of puts it back into the hands of
the local people.”
Plus, “It creates an open forum that normally isn’t there,” he said.
Regular
radio stations have a rotation of music that includes music from the
top 100 or certain genres or time periods, but community radio is not
bound by restrictions. Shows could be created around a variety of music
and programming, exposing listeners to musicians and types of music
they may not have heard before or showcasing bands close to home.
“If
somebody wanted, they could create a show focused on local music and
musicians,” Higgason said, adding that would bring in the possibility
of live music in the radio station.
However, this is the future of the project. Currently, the Olney
Free Radio Project is in the early stages of development. Higgason said
he and a friend, Amy Fehrenbacher, have been “researching all the
various facets” involved, the first of which is the formation of a
non-profit organization to support the radio station.
“We have
to have an official non-profit organization,” he said, and there will
have to be a board of directors once members are signed up.
For
now, Higgason said he is mired in “research, research, research,”
including looking at FCC codes and scientific studies to determine
whether or not the frequency is available and whether or not it will
bleed into military radio channels.
The minimum amount of wattage for a station would be 100 watts,
which would give a 2- to 3.5-mile radius, he said, but he’s hoping for
a 1,000-watt station, which would be a 6- to 10-mile radius.
He
said he’d like to have it located as centrally as possible in Olney. To
do so, the group would have to find a building with enough room to
install an antenna site, tower and all connecting wires. “The only
thing we would have to build would be the studio,” he said, and install
equipment like CD players and turntables.
For just equipment
alone, Higgason estimated the cost to be “upwards of $75,000” to get
started. While he doesn’t have any exact figures on what it will cost
to start the radio station, he does know that a lot of funds will have
to be raised.
“It’s going to take a lot of money to get going,” he said.
However,
once the start-up costs are handled, Higgason said the station will be
“very inexpensive to run, compared to a 50,000-watt station.” There
will be a variety of ways to generate money, such as underwriting, and
to continue raising funds in the community and membership in the
organization.
“The project being low-power FM, it’s very doable,
if you can get the right amount of people behind you and get support
from the community,” Higgason said.
First, however, the non-profit organization has to be formed. “After
that, it’s a matter of fundraising and getting people aware of what’s
going to happen,” he said, as well as recruiting members. “It
may take a few years to do it, but I believe all the work and
fundraising is definitely worth having the radio station,” he said,
adding with a smile, “It’s exciting to think about, I think.”
The
most important part of getting started, however, is getting people to
support the project and the idea of community radio. Higgason feels the
organizational meeting is the place to begin.
“Right now, our
time frame ends with the organizational meeting and will go on from
there,” he said. “We have to form a board of directors, file the proper
paperwork with the IRS and get recognized as an organization.”
Higgason
is adamant that the radio station be a true community project, and the
meeting is a chance for anyone with an interest to become involved.
“Everybody’s invited for this meeting,” he said, and he urges people
who are intrigued by the idea and interested in helping with the radio
station to attend.
At Ophelia’s Cup, “We’ve reserved the big table for the meeting,” he said. “If we could fill the seats, it’d be awesome.”
For more information, e-mail
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or visit www.myspace.com/olneyfreeradioproject.
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