City Hall

WCCA TV and the discovery in the City Hall ClockTower

Interesting fact about Mayor Konnie Luke's discovery of a long-lost portrait of former mayor Francis A. Harrington at the Worcester City Hall clock tower: She found it while taping her WCCA TV 13 program, "Coffee with Konnie", with our staff member, Bill Hamilton! Congratulations, Mayor Lukes! What a find! View the Telegram link

Public Access TV is building community

Cable Advisory Meeting Tonight at 6:30 PM at the Banx Room Wocester Library

Please attend to support WCCA TV.
WCCA still does not have a long term agreement with the city.
Our operations and equipment to facilitate community media television is at risk.

The city council passed a motion about a month ago asking the CIty Manager to settle an agreement in support of WCCA, to ensure WCCA's capacity to meet community media needs in the future, by the end of June. No word on that status of that motion.

The City Manager has asked his Cable Advisory to make recommendations concerning the allocation of PEG Capital Grant and franchise funds. The city has conducted an ascertainment process that began in 2004, and today , over a year and seven months later, WCCA still does not have a contract.

The recent cable renewal secured 5% to support the EPG channels in addition to a $500,000 capital grant. The City Manager is deciding on how to divy the money up between the three channels. WCCA present over 120 hours of video programs on its channel weekly compared to about 10 or so on the bother channels. WCCA's equipment serves the entire community including hundreds of non-profits, schools, colleges, seniors, neighborhood groups and is well used 24/7. Government channel serves city hall and Educational channel serves the Worcester Public School. All our equipment pretty much in dire need to be replaced. The community came out overwhelmingly in support of WCCA and asked the city manager to make assurances for the stations continued growth and capacity to meet community needs. Our past equipment capital funds are depleted. Best practices in this industry are well documented as are typical funding formulas. WCCA has conducted a city wide survey and large community focus groups to communicate community media needs relative to how to support the PEG channels in Worcester. We understand that between the Educational and Government Channels (11 and 12) there is over $1.8 million dollars of underutilized cable funds. In consideration to the above it should be a no brain-er on how to allocate the cable PEG funds to best serve the community needs. So why is this all taking so long?

Come on down to the meeting tonight and find out.

Is Verizon sneaking in the back door? or Do I smell a new franchise license?

Funny, only a couple of days after my previous blog post, SSSHHH... , the generic letter to the editor that has been sent around through members of the Alliance of Community Media, a friend of mine, who lives in Worcester, shows me a letter he received from Verzion. The letter invites him to buy into a bundle package deal that includes DSL, Video , over 200 or so HD Channels, and phone, all for one low price. Sounds great right? Until they become the only game n town and see what happens then. Don't forget, unless they are forced to they will not carry your favorite public access channel(s).
I wonder if the city is on top of this. Worcester, as the licensing authority, has the power to demand that Verizon match, dollar for dollar, term for term, what ever deal they have with Charter for their video services to support public access.
Let's see what comes of that, stay tuned.

Syndicate content