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KPFA Staff Host Renegade Show After Firing
A remarkable scene unfolded at KPFA’s downtown Berkeley offices around 7 a.m., as Morning Show co-hosts Aimee Allison and Brian Edwards-Tiekert bade farewell to their audience from a third-floor studio while Arlene Engelhardt, the Pacifica Foundation executive director, entered the main studio on the first floor to heatedly defend her controversial decision Monday to remove three staffers of the popular morning program.
KPFA 94.1 FM, the Berkeley radio station and linchpin of the liberal Pacifica Radio network, plunged again into crisis Tuesday morning when the staff of The Morning Show locked themselves inside a third-floor alternate studio and began broadcasting during the regularly scheduled timeslot.
Their action comes a day after they were fired by Pacifica’s upper management following a protracted labor dispute.
A remarkable scene unfolded at KPFA’s downtown Berkeley offices around 7 a.m., as Morning Show co-hosts Aimee Allison and Brian Edwards-Tiekert bade farewell to their audience from a third-floor studio while Arlene Engelhardt, the Pacifica Foundation executive director, entered the main studio on the first floor to heatedly defend her controversial decision Monday to remove three staffers of the popular morning program.
“KPFA is in dire straights,” Engelhardt said as she pointed at a KPFA union steward who was in the studio beside her. “The station is not operating in a sound fiscal manner.”
According to Engelhardt, the station had lost close to $1 million two years ago and a half million dollars during the last fiscal year.
In interviews, both Allison and Edwards-Tiekert called Englehardt's action “political retaliation” after a group of KPFA staffers, led by Edwards-Tiekert, filed a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board over a previous round of layoffs at the beleaguered station. Shortly after the KPFA union issued a press release about their complaint, Allison, Edwards-Tiekert and Laura Privus, a producer, were fired, station staff said.
The firings were not financially motivated because the show, which attracts the largest audience of any locally produced program for the station, was also its greatest moneymaker during fundraising drives, supporters of the Morning Show staff said.
“It wasn’t the show that cost the station any money,” said Mitch Jeserich, the producer of the program “Letters to Washington.” “It brought in twice what they cost.”
In a telephone interview Monday evening, Engelhardt said the show’s exceptional fundraising record was due to its prime timeslot, and explained the wider layoffs as a move of financial necessity.
The Morning Show staff had refused to make cuts for two years in a row and had depleted its reserve fund, Engelhardt said. By cutting the staff, annual costs at KPFA will drop from $2.3 million to $1.6 million, according to Engelhardt.
She added: “Quite simply, they were spending more than they were bringing in.”
Engelhardt said she intended to replace the hosts by the end of next week with on-air hosts from other KPFA shows “who you should recognize,” although she did not name them because they were not yet confirmed.
“We have something in the lineup so we’ll come out as good as we were,” she said. “It will still be a big moneymaker.”
Engelhardt said Monday night she was planning to pipe in programming from the Pacifica affiliate in Los Angeles for Tuesday morning’s show.
When told by a reporter Monday night that KPFA staff were planning a coup, she said: “I have to depend on the fact there’s a certain amount of loyalty to the station. I hope that’s the case.”
It was not.
On Tuesday morning engineers based in both Berkeley and Los Angeles called in sick, opening the possibility for Allison and Edwards-Tiekert to host a renegade program.
The fired staff said the incident had roots in a longstanding conflict with the upper management, which many employees viewed as bloated and wasteful.
The station's union said it would take the matter to arbitration. For now, the co-hosts said the show would be off the air beginning Wednesday, Nov. 10.
“It’s an organization with a history of strife — it’s part of the brand,” Allison said Tuesday as she peered cautiously over a third-floor railing, expecting security guards, adding: “I think it’s going to get hectic.”
Their action comes a day after they were fired by Pacifica’s upper management following a protracted labor dispute.
A remarkable scene unfolded at KPFA’s downtown Berkeley offices around 7 a.m., as Morning Show co-hosts Aimee Allison and Brian Edwards-Tiekert bade farewell to their audience from a third-floor studio while Arlene Engelhardt, the Pacifica Foundation executive director, entered the main studio on the first floor to heatedly defend her controversial decision Monday to remove three staffers of the popular morning program.
“KPFA is in dire straights,” Engelhardt said as she pointed at a KPFA union steward who was in the studio beside her. “The station is not operating in a sound fiscal manner.”
According to Engelhardt, the station had lost close to $1 million two years ago and a half million dollars during the last fiscal year.
In interviews, both Allison and Edwards-Tiekert called Englehardt's action “political retaliation” after a group of KPFA staffers, led by Edwards-Tiekert, filed a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board over a previous round of layoffs at the beleaguered station. Shortly after the KPFA union issued a press release about their complaint, Allison, Edwards-Tiekert and Laura Privus, a producer, were fired, station staff said.
The firings were not financially motivated because the show, which attracts the largest audience of any locally produced program for the station, was also its greatest moneymaker during fundraising drives, supporters of the Morning Show staff said.
“It wasn’t the show that cost the station any money,” said Mitch Jeserich, the producer of the program “Letters to Washington.” “It brought in twice what they cost.”
In a telephone interview Monday evening, Engelhardt said the show’s exceptional fundraising record was due to its prime timeslot, and explained the wider layoffs as a move of financial necessity.
The Morning Show staff had refused to make cuts for two years in a row and had depleted its reserve fund, Engelhardt said. By cutting the staff, annual costs at KPFA will drop from $2.3 million to $1.6 million, according to Engelhardt.
She added: “Quite simply, they were spending more than they were bringing in.”
Engelhardt said she intended to replace the hosts by the end of next week with on-air hosts from other KPFA shows “who you should recognize,” although she did not name them because they were not yet confirmed.
“We have something in the lineup so we’ll come out as good as we were,” she said. “It will still be a big moneymaker.”
Engelhardt said Monday night she was planning to pipe in programming from the Pacifica affiliate in Los Angeles for Tuesday morning’s show.
When told by a reporter Monday night that KPFA staff were planning a coup, she said: “I have to depend on the fact there’s a certain amount of loyalty to the station. I hope that’s the case.”
It was not.
On Tuesday morning engineers based in both Berkeley and Los Angeles called in sick, opening the possibility for Allison and Edwards-Tiekert to host a renegade program.
The fired staff said the incident had roots in a longstanding conflict with the upper management, which many employees viewed as bloated and wasteful.
The station's union said it would take the matter to arbitration. For now, the co-hosts said the show would be off the air beginning Wednesday, Nov. 10.
“It’s an organization with a history of strife — it’s part of the brand,” Allison said Tuesday as she peered cautiously over a third-floor railing, expecting security guards, adding: “I think it’s going to get hectic.”
For more information:
http://www.kpfaworker.org
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>>The firings were not financially motivated because the show, which attracts the largest audience of any locally produced program for the station, was also its greatest moneymaker during fundraising drives, supporters of the Morning Show staff said.
See response by Marc Sapir:
They claim that major lay-offs that they themselves
made inevitable by refusing to allow a balanced budget for the past 2-3
years, are a political vendetta. While the outcome of their gambit remains
uncertain, this much is clear. The financial crisis that we as KPFA
listeners, staff and supporters find ourselves in went out of control while
the Exclusivist staff and their supporters were in control of both the KPFA
Station Board and the National Board; when they refused to balance the
station budget. The result of this present hyper-energized resistance to
layoffs could cause an even further erosion in KPFA support as they continue
their many years of machinations against unpaid staff organizing and
listener input in governance and programming decision. The line that the
Pacifica Foundation (and the listener opponents of the exclusivist group) do
not want a paid staff at the Station, is nothing but hyperbolic nonsense.
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/11/09/18663677.php
See response by Marc Sapir:
They claim that major lay-offs that they themselves
made inevitable by refusing to allow a balanced budget for the past 2-3
years, are a political vendetta. While the outcome of their gambit remains
uncertain, this much is clear. The financial crisis that we as KPFA
listeners, staff and supporters find ourselves in went out of control while
the Exclusivist staff and their supporters were in control of both the KPFA
Station Board and the National Board; when they refused to balance the
station budget. The result of this present hyper-energized resistance to
layoffs could cause an even further erosion in KPFA support as they continue
their many years of machinations against unpaid staff organizing and
listener input in governance and programming decision. The line that the
Pacifica Foundation (and the listener opponents of the exclusivist group) do
not want a paid staff at the Station, is nothing but hyperbolic nonsense.
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/11/09/18663677.php
with the purpose of destroying Pacifica & KPFA?
Faux-Green Aimee Allison's goal was to parlay her prime radio spot into Babara Lee's congressional seat. Shade of Jerry Brown?
Faux-Green Aimee Allison's goal was to parlay her prime radio spot into Babara Lee's congressional seat. Shade of Jerry Brown?
I listen to many Pacifica programs on the internet and have followed it generally. I discovered this story on the net.
For someone who hasn't followed KPFA, the claims and responses leave me confused as to who is screwing who and what side to take. I quickly figured out that I was missing background on this dispute.
Would someone who is really who?
Were the Morning Show staffers really Democrats in name only?
For someone who hasn't followed KPFA, the claims and responses leave me confused as to who is screwing who and what side to take. I quickly figured out that I was missing background on this dispute.
Would someone who is really who?
Were the Morning Show staffers really Democrats in name only?
it was about 5 years ago that the KPFA Program Council voted to move Pacifica's most popular program, Democracy Now!, from 6 am to 7 am, when many more people would be able to hear it before (or while) going to work or school in the morning. The Local Station Board voted to support the move, but the Morning Show staff didn't like it and the insider clique backed them and have blocked the move all these years.
Now is the time to move Democracy Now! to 7 am. Do it, Arlene!
I think Democracy Now is one show, maybe the only one, that people on both sides of the KPFA conflict agree on (I mean, that it's a good and popular show).
Not that we don't need a local public affairs program in the morning. I think we do. Pacifica management is planning to move other staffers into the new morning show? Which are the positions being eliminated, then? Philip Malderi said the contract says they can only eliminate positions, not particular people. I am unclear about how that can coincide with following seniority. Too much yelling, not enough clarity from either side.
Not that we don't need a local public affairs program in the morning. I think we do. Pacifica management is planning to move other staffers into the new morning show? Which are the positions being eliminated, then? Philip Malderi said the contract says they can only eliminate positions, not particular people. I am unclear about how that can coincide with following seniority. Too much yelling, not enough clarity from either side.
gaucho=gauchist leftist in frenchoon . I like the nick name so . i miss nora barrow friedman i wonder if there is a way to hire her back since she was really excellent unlike the morning show freaks. NADRA FOSTER SHOULD HAVE HER PLACE BACK AT KPFA TOO. I HATE WHITE RACIST LIKE THE CONCERNED LISTENER AZZHOLE. ANY WAY GOOD NEWS .BET WAS MORE LIKE A TICK . EXCUSE THE SPELLING > THE DRAMA WAS AMAZING THIS MORNING . THEY CRIED THEIR MOTHER TO SAVE THEIR JOBS SHOW HOW MUCH THEY REALLY CARE ABOUT THE STATION.
KPFA compared to Santa Cruz's Free Radio sounds completely reform. We already have mainstream (liberal) everything in this country; newspapers, TV shows, and even radio that pretends to be leftist. KPFA is a part of that, and so is DemocracyNow, which used to be a hard-hitting journalism and has become more amd more mild since 2005. I know- I was a serious listener who would not miss a minute of Amy Goodman.
This is a good opportunity to talk about alternative radio. What is it if it supports the mainstream and encourages everyone to vote (how is that even productive in this country?) and vote not Green Party/Freedom Socialist Party/ etc etc but Democrat?
I think radio becomes more alternative when the only paid staff are the station directors. In a place like the Bay Area, they could have tons of volunteers to bring us real ideas and a true alternative to liberalism.
KPFA, as well as DNow does great work exposing racism, but completely ignores sexism, the oldest oppression. Amy Goodman has yet to cover the case of the Lesbian Seven (women who got 4-11 years in jail for defending themselves from a male attacker) or the rape and murder of activist Sali Grace Eiler from Eugene, Oregon. While she covered the death of OJ Simpson's lawyer (can anyone say she loves the system?!) she made no mention at all of the death of Mary Daly and said nothing about the outstanding work of writer and activist Andrea Dworkin, when she died in 2005.
A real alternative supports the freedom of everyone.
This is a good opportunity to talk about alternative radio. What is it if it supports the mainstream and encourages everyone to vote (how is that even productive in this country?) and vote not Green Party/Freedom Socialist Party/ etc etc but Democrat?
I think radio becomes more alternative when the only paid staff are the station directors. In a place like the Bay Area, they could have tons of volunteers to bring us real ideas and a true alternative to liberalism.
KPFA, as well as DNow does great work exposing racism, but completely ignores sexism, the oldest oppression. Amy Goodman has yet to cover the case of the Lesbian Seven (women who got 4-11 years in jail for defending themselves from a male attacker) or the rape and murder of activist Sali Grace Eiler from Eugene, Oregon. While she covered the death of OJ Simpson's lawyer (can anyone say she loves the system?!) she made no mention at all of the death of Mary Daly and said nothing about the outstanding work of writer and activist Andrea Dworkin, when she died in 2005.
A real alternative supports the freedom of everyone.
Democracy Now is a front for corporate foundations which fund it. It has worked to cover up the 9/11 story, and has been only mildly critical of Obama, chiding him for supposedly not living up to his promises, when in fact he promised escalation in Afghanistan, "pragmatic" economic policies, promotion of nuclear power/coal/off-shore oil,...
See this for Bob Feldman on Democracy Now and its funding.
http://www.questionsquestions.net/feldman/feldman01.html
See this for Bob Feldman on Democracy Now and its funding.
http://www.questionsquestions.net/feldman/feldman01.html
I think Democracy Now! has done superb critical coverage of the Obama administration's policies, such as in Afghanistan. I have heard the argument made that they haven't given adequate coverage to the possibility that 9--11 was an inside job, which is legitimate, but how this observation means corporate funding escapes me.
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