Keep station public, local
Wednesday night, trustees for the Coast Community College District
had their first chance to speak as a group about the latest twist to
the sale of KOCE-TV. With the threat of a lawsuit hanging over their
heads, it’s safe to assume that their words will be careful and
measured, if not a bit frustrated and angry.
If trustees do show anger, they will only be reflecting how a
majority of people who live within the district’s boundaries feel.
There is widespread disbelief that the district’s sale of the public
TV station to the KOCE-TV Foundation has been derailed by first a
court ruling in June and more recently a request by Christian
broadcaster Daystar that the court award it the right to buy the
station for as much as $40 million.
If it all sounds painfully familiar, it is.
In December 2003, the district board voted to sell the station to
the foundation for $32 million -- $8 million of that in cash. Daystar
had submitted a $40-million, all-cash bid, which trustees rejected as
being filed after the bidding deadline. Daystar sued, but the Orange
County Superior Court upheld the sale to the foundation. The Federal
Communications Commission then transferred the broadcast license to
the foundation, which officially took over the station last year.
And that, everyone but the people at Daystar figured, was that.
Like all those who favor the foundation, we believe the
responsible course of action is to keep the station public and local,
which is what the foundation has done.
Unfortunately, the court lately seems to be thinking differently,
and if Daystar ends up getting control of KOCE, it will be a loss for
Newport-Mesa and the county. There are already too few local media
outlets, and certainly nothing can replace KOCE when it comes to
producing educational programs. Certainly Daystar -- whose officials
say they plan a lawsuit if the district doesn’t accept their
arguments and sell the station to them -- has no background in such
work.
A hope, though, rests in the fact that this story has already
taken plenty of unexpected turns. Perhaps another will appear soon,
and the foundation will get to keep KOCE, and the public will get to
keep its TV station.
QUESTION OF THE WEEK
Should KOCE trustees fight to keep the TV station public? Call our
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