Students back top bidder for KOCE-TV
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Marisa O’Neil
Orange County residents and college students appear to have differing
hopes for the fate of the county’s only public broadcasting station.
The Coast Community College District, which owns KOCE, will decide
Oct. 15 whether the channel will retain its public broadcasting
format or be sold to one of four Christian broadcasting networks. A
recent survey showed that 82% of Orange County residents want it to
stay a PBS channel, but a trustee for the Associated Students of
Orange Coast College said students support a sale that would help
financially strapped colleges in the district.
“We would like the board to find a compromise which would allow
enough money for at least temporary reinstatement of core classes and
take into consideration the community and employees at KOCE,”
Associated Students trustee Zachary Liberman said. “Our main point is
that the bylaws state that the mission of Coast Community College
District is to provide education for students. It doesn’t say
anything about a television station.”
Liberman said that budget cuts to schools and the resulting
canceling of classes at OCC have made the sale necessary. OCC has cut
about 1,300 class sections in the past three semesters.
The Associated Students has been circulating petitions and
mobilizing students on campus.
District spokesperson Erin Cohn said that the amount of the sale
would determine how the proceeds would be used.
“Obviously, the first priority would be to restore classes,” Cohn
said. “As it stands now, students are being turned away.”
The Coast Community College District has five bidders for KCET,
including four religious programmers -- Daystar Television, Trinity
Broadcasting, Almavision Hispanic Network and LeSEA Broadcasting
Corporation. Daystar and Trinity have each bid $25 million.
The lowest bid is from the KOCE Foundation and Los Angeles PBS
station KCET. They have offered $10 million, with $1 million down.
In a survey released by Cal State Fullerton and the Orange County
Business Council on Tuesday, 82% of Orange County residents said they
would prefer that KOCE remain a public broadcasting entity, even if
it meant accepting a smaller sale price. According to the survey, 53%
of respondents who said they watch religious programming also
supported keeping the station in its current format.
“I think that there’s a sense of ownership for the public with
KOCE,” said Phillip Gianos, Cal State Fullerton political science
professor. “And I think they considered the mix of programming
available. They may not find another religious programming station as
attractive if it comes at the cost of losing Orange County’s only PBS
station.”
The Coast Community College District pays $1.8 million a year to
run the station, KOCE President Mel Rogers said. Grants and
fund-raisers -- such as pledge drives -- cover the remaining $8
million in operating costs.
KOCE also faces an estimated $8.5 million upgrade to a digital
format, as required by the FCC.
“Coast Community College District just doesn’t have the kind of
budget to allow KOCE to become all they could be in this digital
environment,” Cohn said.
Coast Community College District, which includes Orange Coast
College, Golden West College and Coastline College, has owned KOCE
for the past 30 years. According to the station’s Web site, it has
won 24 L.A.-area Emmy Awards.
Rogers said that they are still operating and still seeking
supporters.
“We’re approaching this with a positive attitude,” Rogers said.
“We hope and fully expect a decision to be made for us to continue to
serve Orange County as a PBS station. I think it’s increasingly
important for this county to have some electronic media that pays
attention to it.”
Orange Coast College will host a public debate, “To Sell or Not to
Sell: A Debate on the Future of KOCE” at 7 p.m. Oct. 7 in the Student
Center Lounge. The event is sponsored by OCC’s United Student
Sociologists.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education and may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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