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Refugee Radio Station Blocked by Red Tape

Zathrus writes "According to a Wired story, a volunteer organized low power FM radio station is being blocked by local administration and red tape. They've already won the classically big battles -- securing FCC licenses, obtaining the broadcast equipment and radios, getting the manpower, and having some big name backing -- only to be blocked at the last minute by some lower level administrators who don't think information is a worthwhile resource." From the article: "According to KAMP, Royal claimed the Astrodome was not able to provide power to KAMP's low-power FM transmitter. When KAMP offered to bring in enough batteries to power the equipment off the Astrodome's grid, they were still denied. Obey, speaking to Wired News, explained that the JIC couldn't see a use for the radio station when they had the ability to communicate via the loudspeaker system and newsletters. "

8 of 420 comments (clear)

  1. It's all about.... by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 5, Informative
    Control.

    From the Villiage Voice:

    FEMA Nixes Grassroots Radio Station for Hurricane Evacuees

    Bureaucracy KO's info source at the Astrodome

    by Sarah Ferguson
    September 8th, 2005 5:04 PM

    Although the effort was http://?www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la -na-radio8sep08,1,6993197.story?coll=la-headlines- nation>trumpeted in the media as an example of grassroots ingenuity in the face of disaster, local officials with the Federal Emergency Management Agency have nixed an attempt by Houston activists to set up a low-power radio station at the Astrodome that would have broadcast Hurricane Katrina relief information for evacuees.

    The project was unplugged even though it had key support. On Monday, the Federal Communications Commission quickly granted temporary licenses to broadcast inside the Astrodome and the adjacent Reliant Center. The station was also backed by the Houston Mayor's office and Texas governor Rick Perry. But local officials said FEMA bureaucrats KO'd the station--dubbed KAMP "Dome City Radio"--because of "security concerns."

    "They wanted unlimited access to the buildings, which we could not give to anyone in the media," said Gloria Roemer, a spokesperson for Harris County, which has jurisdiction over the Astrodome complex. Currently reporters are allowed in only on 15-minute guided tours.

    According to Roemer, FEMA officials also believed they could not allocate "scarce" electricity, office space, and phone and Internet access to the volunteer station--even though activists say they offered to run the station on batteries and use their own cellphones.

    Supporters of KAMP, which was set to launch at 95.3 FM, blame red tape and bureaucrats seeking to "manage the news."

    "I'm very disappointed," said Councilmember Ada Edwards, who represents a mostly black district in central Houston and had issued a letter of support for the station. "One of the real challenges of this big tragedy has been access to communication--open and honest communication. I really hoped this would be an open outlet for people to get information that was unscripted and that would really address their needs.

    "But it seems par for the course in terms of how this whole thing has been rolling out with FEMA and the Red Cross trying to keep tight control and manage the news," Edwards complained. "It's really sad when these people feel they have to sanitize all the time."

    Activists with Houston Indymedia and Pacifica radio first brainstormed the idea over the weekend when they visited the Astrodome and spoke to swamped relief workers and survivors desperate for information about emergency services and news from back home.

    "People were asking things like how can I get my FEMA check, do my kids need shots for school, can I get a free cellphone, how do I get out information about missing family members," says Jim Ellinger, a freelance radio consultant from Austin. "This is complicated stuff that you can't really address on a booming public address system. The mainstream radio stations are more focused on broadcasting to the general public about where to donate to hurricane relief, so there was no place for survivors to go to get what they need. "

    "We talked to cops, volunteers, church groups--everyone said it was a good idea," Ellinger added.

    But Astrodome officials were apparently more concerned about evacuees fighting over the radios. "They were worried about noise and people stealing them or that people would be tuning in to gangsta rap on other Houston stations, which they said could incite violence," says Tish Stringer, a graduate teacher at Rice University and organizer with Houston Indymedia. After several days of back and forth, activists agreed to provide 10,000 cheap, Walkman-style radios with batteries.

    --
    "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
    1. Re:It's all about.... by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 3, Informative

      There's the basis of your racist bullshit from FEMA, right there. Someone got their whole family drowned, has been starved, dehydrated, literally dragged through shit, kept in a stable under the conditions of a hog farm feed-lot... Listening to Kurupt is gonna' put 'em over the edge.

      Just as bad as right here in Portland. The Multnomah County Sheriff has a brand new jail that was built right before the recession. It's a minimum security facility- 535 beds, no bars, full service medical hospital, kitchen, Internet Access (both Wifi and brand new cubicles with two-year-old but never used computers in them on the wired network), flat screen TVs everywhere. He offered it as a shelter when it was thought that we'd get 2500 refugees here- hey, it's better than a cot in a gym of an abandoned high school, which is the other two sites offered. But because it's a J-A-I-L, the Red Cross got all racially and southern culturally sensitive and turned him down. I say, when or if refugees arrive- the Sheriff should make his pitch directly to those involved- it's a damned sight more comfortable in the barracks of the Wapato Correctional Facility than in a disused gym.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  2. Re:black people by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 4, Informative

    George Bush had been trying to get the local government to declare a need for federal assistance.

    You might want to check Snopes before you try to repeat urban legends as fact, lest we think you're a part of the current administration (who all seem to be so media illiterate that they probably can't spell snopes let alone look up to see if their information is accurate before spreading it).

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  3. Re:black people by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Who's "facts" do you believe?

    Well, let's see the options. A well known website that debunks or supports urban ledgends based on sound research, or "news" programs well known for actually buying stories from the government. I think I'll take the first.

    I heard on a news broadcast that GWB was trying to get the local officials to declare a need for federal aid.

    And if you check snopes, that urban legend has been debunked. Yes, the administration itself has been trying to put forth that image to make a very bad excuse for not showing up sooner- and yes, elsewhere on Snopes you'll actually find support for such things as underwater buses and other mistakes made by local officials- but the point is to try to tell the truth, otherwise you do more harm to your side than is needed. And repeating stuff you heard on a single news program with no colaberation for the story? That's just drinking the kool aid without checking it for poison first.

    And you don't care to comment on the other parts of my post?

    No, because the other parts of your post were mere logical extensions of a fact that did not exist to begin with, and thus were invalid by extension.

    The actual meat of the comment?

    The actual meat of the comment seemed to be that local officials needed to call for federal aid before federal aid would be offered. The link to snopes in my message shows the real timeline that was recorded- and that it was actually 3 days between the local officials asking for a mandatory evacuation, declaring a state of emergency, and formally asking for federal help, all of which were done BEFORE the hurricane hit; and the federal government actually responding at all. It was an additional 2 days before NBC broke the news in an interview to the head of FEMA that there were people in the convention center- something that the entire rest of the country knew the entire time.

    I'm sorry- the basic excuse of "but we couldn't go in until the local governments asked us to" falls completely flat on it's face- and that is obvious from the Snopes article on the subject that I linked to.

    Like I said the first time- next time check snopes before you repeat urban legends you heard on the "news".

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  4. Re:No, that's incorrect by dubl-u · · Score: 4, Informative

    They're cheap enough that someone could buy a thousand of them and distribute them to everyone in the Astrodome.

    Indeed, they had already arranged a donation of 10,000 radios, so that there would be plenty for all.

    Very true, but that doesn't diminish the fact that it WILL help people.

    Indeed. A psychiatrist was mentioning somewhere that one of the worst things for people who have been through disasters is to sit around with nothing to do and nothing but the disaster to think about. For people developing PTSD, it can intensify and lengthen their problems.

    And there's a lot to be said for community-building and morale. Heck, just the music alone would help. Imagine you're on a long road trip and the radio breaks. How sad would you be? And now imagine somebody else is driving, you don't know where you're going, and you're not sure when you'll get there.

  5. Re:Information Control by zippthorne · · Score: 4, Informative

    or 2004 DNC (boston) where protestors were segregated to "free speech zones" locked behind a fence. under a freeway ramp. down the street from the convention center.

    Free speech has never meant that you have a right to be heard. The only people who would argue for that are telemarketers. Do you also think that coke employees should be able to muscle their way into paid pepsi ads?

    That said, I have a real problem with the way NO is being handled. If people want to provide some service, why not let them? Same thing with the boaters who tried to get in day one with chainsaws and provisions but were turned away. It seems as if whoever was/is in charge thinks that only "official" response is acceptable and good.

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  6. Re:Information Control by pyser · · Score: 3, Informative

    The equipment you need to feed a radio signal is somewhat bulky and expensive.

    Not so. You can fit a transmitter that will broadcast to the entire Astrodome, and several city blocks around it, in the palm of your hand.

  7. Re:Information Control by finkployd · · Score: 3, Informative