The Low Power Blues

Regular listeners and supporters of WPFW have noticed something in recent weeks–we can’t hear the station!

And while the loss of the station’s regular strong signal has been obvious to us for weeks, general manager John Hughes seemed to oblivious to the problem at the July Local Station Board Meeting. After several community members and board members asked about the poor reception of the station, Hughes asked, “You can’t hear the station?” And, in response, there was an incredulous shout from the crowd of “No!”

The only thing worse than the station not being fully on the “air”–with neighboring stations on the dial crowding into our 89.3 position–is that Hughes didn’t know it was a problem. Since the meeting, the station has been airing announcements explaining that our broadcast tower, which we share with WAMU, is being treated for lead abatement and that we will being broadcasting at low power from a back-up generator for four to six weeks. No information is offered about when the “four to six weeks” began or will end. Meanwhile, though, many listeners notice that WAMU, which is also impacted by the abatement process, can be heard loud and clear–sometimes at our spot on the dial.

The low power predicament adds only insult to injury for programmers who now must volunteer time to not even be heard. Our radio audience, already alienated and in decline after last year’s unannounced  grid change, is drifting away to other stations. The best way to hear the station is online at wpfwfm.org

July 5 Protesters Targeted By Hughes

Hughes Threatens Programmers for Staging July 5 Protest

At the July 10 Local Station Board Meeting and in a memo to programmers on July 11, Hughes erroneously asserted that the First Amendment protected peaceful assembly outside the temporary studios on July 5 was an egregious violation of Pacifica bylaws. He grouped the peaceful rally, which included programmers Jay Winter Nightwolf and Esther Iverem among the dozen gathered, in the same category as a recent theft at the office by a substitute programmer and the propping open of an entrance door by a programming “collective” as an act that had seriously damaged the station’s tenancy at the temporary location. In his memo he said that “each of these incidents is being dealt with on a case by case basis…I thought it appropriate to inform all of you of these incidents and to assure all of you who have the station’s best interests at heart that these violations will be dealt with firmly.”

CMS believes that free speech, especially by journalists and members who support this foundation with their dollars is protected free speech that will be vigorously defended. If you share this view, please consider putting it in writing to management, via the WPFW Community Advisory Board and the Local Station Board:

cab.wpfw@mail.com

wpfwlsb@gmail.com

Leadership of both organizations have pledged to help make certain that listener concerns are delivered to management and do not get lost!

July Local Station Board Meeting

CMS was well-represented among the community who showed up for the Local Station Board Meeting on July 10 at the Thurgood Marshall Center. Most of the community comments focused on the July 4 holiday programming fiasco, as well as on calls for station general manager John Hughes to be removed for overall mismanagement and poor leadership at the station.

In response, Hughes laid aside all expressed outrage and said 1) that it is in his right to preempt programming and 2) that he had carried out such all-music pre-emptions on other holidays. He did not explain to the satisfaction of those gathered why no content in line with the station’s mission–jazz and justice–was played on July 4 and why programming was also pre-empted on a non-holiday, July 5. In one amusing exchange, Hughes said that the July 4 party music line-up was “heritage music” and board member Vanessa Dixon asked him which heritage it belonged to. Hughes responded that it belonged to the “African” heritage and the room erupted in laughter.
Also significant in the exchange between Dixon and Hughes was Hughes’ assertion of a new protocol for programmers to have substitutes sit in for them when they cannot do their shows. Hughes is using the unfortunate recent theft at the temporary studios by a substitute host to create a new rule that all music programmers must submit requests for substitute hosts to “programming coordinator” Yolanda Turner, who must approve them. Public Affairs hosts must submit requests for subs to Gloria Minott, who must approve them and news programmers must request and get approval with Askia Muhammad. While such a system, on its face, would appear to make sense, it is actually unprecedented for music and public affairs and reflects the fact that we have no program director–a manager who would be the normal go-to person in such circumstances. We suspect that one purpose behind these new “rules” is an attempt to take away what measure of autonomy programmers have had in recruiting and providing an opportunity for new voices at the station and in providing an outlet for programmers removed from the grid by Hughes in a manner in violation of the Pacifica bylaws. We will keep watching this matter.

Pacifica National Board to Take Up Issue of WPFW Management

In other LSB news, the MAS committee is proceeding with an evaluation of John Hughes and the Pacifica Board has agreed to take up the matter of WPFW management at its July 11 meeting. To email the PNB, send your letters to pnb@pacifica.org.

July 6 CMS Meeting

Those gathered decided to not devote the meeting the structure and development within CMS and wanted to devote the meeting to re-energize our longtime goals of removing John Hughes, removing Tony Norman–a publicly elected official who is illegally on the LSB and PNB, restoring the programming grid and preparing for LSB elections and recalls.

Stay Tuned!

‘Don’t Use Our Music To Drown Our Voices’

cmsrallypic

 By Starr Bowie

Carrying signs and chanting slogans such as “Take back WPFW,” “Social Justice Takes No Holiday” and “Whose Station? Our Station!,” more than a dozen protestors braved the blistering heat outside the temporary studios of Washington, DC community radio station WPFW on July 5 to protest an abrupt holiday programming change that eliminated alternative views on “Independence Day” and world affairs.

Those gathered, from Concerned Members and Supporters of WPFW (CMS), also supported the attempt by veteran Native American programmer Jay Winter Nightwolf to enter the studios to broadcast in his 1 p.m. time slot, in defiance of the unannounced pre-emption of his show by station general manager John Hughes. When Nightwolf attempted to enter the building shortly before 1 p.m. Hughes stood inside the glass entry doors and locked out the nationally-acclaimed host, not only from the studios, but from the office building housing them. “The Nightwolf Show” was to feature the prominent historian and human rights activist Dr. James Anthony Hall, author of the acclaimed book, Earth Into Property, which explored the relationship between the dispossession of Indigenous peoples and the making of global capitalism. In its place was a mixture of instrumental programming and light banter about July 4th cookouts and upcoming concerts.

“WPFW is a station for jazz and justice and we’re here today to tell John Hughes to not use our music to drown our voices,” said the author and artist Esther Iverem, co-host with Verna Avery-Brown of “What’s At Stake” on Wednesday mornings. “While I love party music, it should not replace our voices on struggle and history. Bump and grind music —not even jazz, which is part of our mission—was featured all day on July 4. While I love to party, that programming should not replace alternative voices on the meaning of Independence Day. It flies in the face of the station’s historical mission as a “jazz and justice” resource for the community.

According to the statement handed out by CMS, which is made up of listeners, paid and unpaid staff, station programmers, and other volunteers for the Pacifica Radio station, WPFW has always been in the forefront of regional media efforts to raise the consciousness of its listeners regarding political developments now and in history that impact on the well-being of diverse communities.  It has particularly offered an alternative vision of national holidays by those struggling to expose injustice and support human rights.  Considering that holiday periods allow new listeners time away from their everyday work lives to explore new media, Friday’s protestors proclaimed their view that it is crucial to offer programming at those times that introduces the station as a vehicle for alternative views and voices.  Not to take advantage of such periods to maximize outreach to new audiences and to uplift regular listeners sabotages the station’s ability to survive in accordance with its mission.

On June 28 a management representative told Jared Ball, host of the Friday11 a.m. program “The Super-Funky Soul Power Hour,” and J. Winter Nightwolf, host of the 1 p.m. program, “The Nightwolf Show,” that their shows would be among those to be replaced on July 5 by jazz programming “in celebration of” the July 4th holiday.  There was no consultation with the programmers, despite the fact that both hosts had planned and announced on-air the programming for that day.  Ball had already promoted his show on Nelson Mandela, the iconic leader of the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa.

“This is a community-supported station,” said Nightwolf to those gathered and to a TV cameraman who recorded the rally. “Out listeners give their money to support our shows and programming yet we have no say in our programs and programmers being removed, pre-empted or disrespected.”

Iverem added that in this year, marking the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation and 50 years after the pivotal year of 1963 in the Civil Rights Movement, the station’s programming was a disgrace. “All of these significant historical markers require our attention as we continue to face rising unemployment and underemployment, failing schools, grossly inadequate health care, crushing housing shortages, escalating food costs, a voracious privatized prison industry, police brutality and war abroad.  We need to protect the vehicle for grassroots organizing provided by WPFW, our safeguard of freedom of speech, more than ever.”

CMS, which can be found online at thepeopleforwpfw.com, was formed in December of 2012 when the current station management unilaterally enacted sweeping grid changes without consulting programmers or community representatives. The organization has made significant gains in restoring several programs to the grid through broadly-supported petitions, letter-writing campaigns, community leafleting, town hall meetings, rallies, and street demonstrations.  CMS mounted a recently successful multi-faceted campaign to prevent management from moving the station to a property owned by ultra-right wing media conglomerate Clear Channel.

What is July 4th to Us?

Protesting an abrupt holiday programming change that will eliminate alternative views on “Independence Day” and world affairs, Concerned Members and Supporters of WPFW (CMS) is issuing a statement and will protest on Friday, July 5, beginning at 12:30 p.m. outside of the temporary station studios at 1819 L St. NW in Washington, DC. This action and statement is in response to the decision by station manager John Hughes to pre-empt vital news and public affairs programming, in favor of playing all music, on July 4 and July 5. Friday’s protesters will rally in support of Jay Winter Nightwolf, veteran Native American programmer at the station, who will come to the station to do his show on Friday, in defiance of the unannounced pre-emption.

CMS, made up of listeners, paid and unpaid staff, station programmers and other volunteers for the Pacifica Radio station in Washington, DC, says that the decision by Hughes hampers the station’s ability to fulfill its historical mission as a “Jazz and Justice” resource for the community.

On June 28, a management representative told Friday programmer Jared Ball that his 11 a.m. program “The Super-Funky Soul Power Hour,” as well as J. Winter Nightwolf’s 1 p.m. program, “The Nightwolf Show,” would be among the shows replaced on July 5, by jazz programming “in celebration of” the July 4th holiday. There was no consultation with the programmers, despite the fact that both hosts had planned and announced on-air the programming for that day. Ball had already promoted his show on Nelson Mandela, the critically-ill iconic leader of the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa. Nightwolf’s show was to feature the prominent author and historian James Anthony Hall, author of the acclaimed book, Earth Into Property, which explored the relationship between the dispossession of Indigenous peoples and the making of global capitalism

WPFW has always been in the forefront of regional media efforts to raise the consciousness of its listeners regarding political developments now and in history that impact on the well-being of diverse communities. It has particularly offered an alternative vision of national holidays by those struggling to expose injustice and support human rights. Considering that holiday periods allow new listeners time away from their everyday work lives to explore new media, it is crucial for the station to continue to offer programming at those times that introduces it as a vehicle for alternative views and voices, as well as for African-American classical music and music of other cultures. Not to take advantage of such periods to maximize outreach to new audiences and uplift regular listeners sabotages the station’s ability to survive in accordance with its mission.

Racially-oppressed communities and all working communities find themselves this very month confronting a plethora of issues that critically affect their futures. Last week’s Supreme Court decision gutting the Voting Rights Act shows us the relevance today of the speech by famed abolitionist Frederick Douglass 161 years ago, in which he declared the popular July 4th celebration to be “a sham.” Moreover, this year commemorates 50 years since the assassination of Medgar Evers, the 1963 March on Washington and the murders of the four little girls in Birmingham. This year, 150 years since the Emancipation Proclamation, we witness the trial of George Zimmerman in the killing of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin. As of this writing, Nelson Mandela remains in critical condition in South Africa and people all over the United States are preparing to rally to “Restore the Fourth” on July 4, to protest government spying and violations of the First and Fourth Amendments of the United States. All these significant events require our attention as we continue to face rising unemployment, failing schools, inadequate health care, crushing housing shortages, escalating food costs, a voracious privatized prison industry, police brutality and war abroad. We need to protect the vehicle for grassroots organizing provided by WPFW, our safeguard of freedom of speech, more than ever.

Those protesting the decision of management to scuttle locally-produced news and public affairs shows demand support for programming that integrates the people’s music with the people’s politics and doesn’t segregate justice talk from justice music.

CMS was formed in December of 2012 when the current station management unilaterally enacted sweeping grid changes without consultation with programmers or community representatives. The organization has made significant gains in restoring some of the grid through broadly-supported petitions, letter-writing campaigns, street demonstrations, rallies and town hall meetings.  It mounted a successful, multi-faceted campaign to prevent management from moving the station to a property owned by ultra-right wing media conglomerate Clear Channel.

CMS regards the recent steps as a further effort at diluting WPFW’s role as a station for social justice. Censoring progressive programmers during a key holiday broadcasting period is just the latest manifestation of management’s intention to install nationally-produced programs with corporate sponsorship in place of vital, ear-to-the-ground, incisive programming by our roster of experienced activist-programmers. We intend to meet every challenge in our fight to save our beloved community radio station, which is a “voice of the voiceless” in Washington, DC.

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Supporters of Jazz and Justice…Important Meeting July 6, 10a-1p

As management of WPFW goes from bad to worse each day—with activist programmers now regularly harassed or prevented from producing their shows…

* What can Concerned Members and Supporters of WPFW (CMS) do to ensure that WPFW stays on the air?

* How can we ensure that future generations will have the benefit of a station unlike any other on the planet – the one with that quirky blend of radical-wisdom and musical- brilliance that has nurtured our souls for decades?

* How can we structure ourselves (as an organization of members) to become effective in this fight?

Those of us who gathered last week at Tenley Circle Library grappled with these questions and others and decided to meet again next week to focus on just these two topics: Structure and Development. We hope you will join us:

Saturday July 6 – 10 am to 1 pm

Westminster Church

400 I Street SW

Washington, DC 20024

We will be meeting in the lower level. Please use the basement entrance by the patio.

If you will not be able to attend but would like to share any thoughts about these topics, please feel free to reply to this email and your message will be shared with those in attendance.

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