| Subject: Pirate radio stations near the Nellis range |
| From: miso@sushi.com |
| Date: 16/03/2007, 04:19 |
| Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy.area51 |
http://www.pahrumpvalleytimes.com/2007/Feb-02-Fri-2007/news/12344648.html
Reid helps resurrect closed Goldfield radio station
BY MARK WAITE
GOLDFIELD -- Chalk one up for the little guy in a battle against the
federal bureaucracy.
Rod Moses, owner of Radio Goldfield Broadcast Inc., was given special
temporary authority to go back on the air with his low-power radio
station in a Jan. 29 letter from the Federal Communications
Commission.
Moses said it may be a couple of weeks yet before he hoists the 90-
foot radio tower which will permit him to broadcast at 100 watts,
enough to penetrate parts of Tonopah and maybe as far south as Lida
Junction. The frequency this time, however, will be 106.3 FM instead
of the former 100.3 FM.
Moses credited Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., with pressuring the FCC.
FCC enforcement agents came to Moses' trailer, which also houses his
radio station, June 9, 2006, and shut him down for operating without a
license. They based the action on a complaint filed with the agency.
Moses had been running Radio Goldfield since March 2005, broadcasting
community news as well as oldies from an MP3 player. However, he was
informed by the FCC that the period to apply for a low-wattage FM
radio station license had expired.
"In support of the request, RGB states that the station provides
current road conditions, information on local law enforcement and
public safety," states the letter from James Bradshaw, FCC deputy
chief of the Audio Division Media Bureau.
The letter cites Section 309(f) of the Communications Act of 1934,
which authorizes the commission to grant the temporary allowance in
cases of "extraordinary circumstances requiring temporary
authorizations in the public interest."
A letter from Sen. Reid dated Sept. 1, 2006, to FCC chairman Kevin
Martin states that Radio Goldfield made significant public interest
contributions to the Goldfield community.
"Radio Goldfield programming brought regular weather reports to this
high-desert area of Nevada, where conditions can abruptly change in
often times dramatic ways," Reid's letter states.
Reid added, "Radio Goldfield programming also included timely and
reliable information on law enforcement, public safety and school
activities that helped the residents of Goldfield stay informed and
engaged in their community. Moreover the station broadcasted Sunday
religious services that were listened to faithfully by those living
too far from a place of worship or those simply too feeble to make a
weekly journey there practicable."
Moses said letters protesting the shutdown were sent to all the
members of the Nevada congressional delegation, but all of them,
except Reid, declined to take action after receiving a letter from the
FCC stating that Moses was operating illegally. The FCC threatened a
$10,000 fine.
Moses, a radio broadcaster for 40 years originally from Fresno,
Calif., also circulated a petition around Goldfield that compiled 180
signatures requesting the station be kept open.
But Moses said his compliance with the FCC agents helped him when it
came time to restart the station.
"We shut down immediately and that was the key to the whole licensing
issue, is that when the FCC comes out you have 24 hours to shut down
or you'll never get one (license)," Moses said. He told the agents,
"It'll be off (the air) by the time you get to your car."
Reid, himself coming from another small town, Searchlight, sympathized
with him, Moses said.
Moses also credited Esmeralda County Commissioner R.J. Gillum and
local Goldfield activist Virginia Ridgeway with helping his cause.
Moses said a friend who used to run a 50,000-watt radio station in
California informed him that because of his protest, other hopeful
radio station operators are bringing up a resolution to ask the FCC to
offer low-power FM licenses again.
"What they do is, they paint it with a broad brush because of the
metro areas," Moses said. "We'll probably operate under an STA until
they reopen the filing period for low-power FM. There's thousands of
stations and thousands of towns in the country that are like
Goldfield. They have little or no stations around them. They (the FCC)
finally discovered through us they messed up."
Another low-power radio station operates out of Tonopah at 92.7 FM
with no commercial interruptions, not even station identification, but
a limited music selection.