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April 17, 2008
By PATRICK McARDLE Herald Staff
BENNINGTON
— Town Manager Stuart Hurd told the Select Board on Monday he was
"encouraged" by recent negotiations between a citizens group to which
Hurd belongs and Southern Vermont College over the fate of WBTN 1370-AM. In
February, college officials announced they could no longer afford to
underwrite losses which they estimated at around $450,000 since the
station was donated to the college by Robert Howe, a college trustee,
in 2001.
Hurd said at Monday's Select Board meeting that he was
limited in what he could say because of the ongoing negotiation process
but he said he was encouraged by conversations with the college to date.
"I'm confident that within the next 30 days, I'll have something positive to report," he told board members.
Hurd said the citizens group was working toward the creation of a new private nonprofit that could own or run the radio station.
The
intent is to find funding from within the community to support the
continued existence and broadcasting of Bennington's only remaining
radio station. One idea that had been discussed, according to Hurd, was
borrowing the money to buy WBTN using the station itself as collateral.
Southern
Vermont College spokesman David Scribner said after several meetings
between the college and the citizens group, the future of WBTN "looks
promising."
"The ideal that everyone, including us, would love
to see is that radio station continues to operate, that WBTN continues
to operate locally as a community radio station, a community resource,
and that it maintains its independence," he said on Tuesday.
Scribner
said he was a proponent of local media and would be sorry to see WBTN
purchased and operated by one of the large conglomerates that operate
through much of the country.
While Scribner said negotiations
over the radio station should not be conducted through the press, he
said college officials remained eager to see WBTN survive in some
fashion in Bennington and as a learning tool for Southern Vermont
College students.
"It's wonderful to see so many people coming
forward and suggesting so many creative solutions for preserving WBTN
and how it can continue to serve the community," he said.
The
citizens group includes state Rep. Mary Morrissey; Joann Erenhouse,
executive director of the Bennington Area Chamber of Commerce; John
Shanahan, executive director of the Better Bennington Corp.; Lisa Byer,
executive director of local cable channel Catamount Access Television
or CAT-TV; and Howe.
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