WOBC
Slapped with $1,000 Fine
By
Channing Joseph
In
a Nov. 7 order from the Federal Communications Comm-ission in Washington,
D.C., Oberlin College’s popular student-run radio station
WOBC-FM was charged with a $1,000 fine for “willful and repeated…failure
to maintain operational Emergency Alert System equipment.”
According to the FCC, the equipment “is designed to provide
the President with a means to address the American people in the
event of a [local or] national emergency.” David Solomon,
Chief of the FCC’s Enforcement Bureau, said, “…The
Rules [require] broadcast stations to install and maintain operational
EAS equipment, so that monitoring and transmitting functions are
available during times when the station is in operation.”
On March 12 of this year, however, an agent from the FCC’s
Detroit office paid an unexpected visit to the network and discovered
WOBC was not only out of compliance with the Federal Commission’s
regulations, but had not maintained working EAS equipment in the
station office since at least New Year’s of 2001.
Senior Neil Freeman, WOBC’s current station manager, blamed
the network’s high rate of turnover for the problem.
“[The system] wasn’t functional because, at some point
in the ’90s, there was a breakdown in communication between
station leadership from year to year,” he said. “If
you have new people every three or four years, then you can’t
really preserve any of the knowledge that you learn.”
WOBC was originally fined a much greater sum of $8,000 on May 23,
which it then appealed, claiming that the network could not afford
such a large fine.
According to Freeman, the summer station manager, senior Michael
Gallope, along with the help of the station’s faculty advisor
Tom Lopez, sent in documents attesting to the station’s fiscal
situation for the past several years and pointing out that the station
had, since the inspection, installed the necessary equipment so
as to comply with regulations.
As a result of the appeal, the original charge was then reduced
to $1,000. Yet according to Freeman, this figure is still too great
a price to pay. WOBC’s annual budget is less than $20,000
per year, covering the salaries of four student staff members and
a monthly retainer for a professional engineer, as well as licensing
fees and equipment upgrades. The station plans to request the necessary
funds from Student Finance’s Ad-Hoc Committee, Freeman said.
He also suggested that in the future WOBC will do its best to make
certain that a similar violation does not occur.
“We’re trying our best to keep the station as together
as possible and to improve continuity between years,” Freeman
said.
Yet he seemed to shy away from taking full responsibility for the
legal breach.
“When an organization is in disarray, and a lot of things
need to be fixed, then it is easier to focus on non-technical things
like energizing membership, the physical organization of the station
and getting people involved, rather than the technical things like
FCC compliance,” he said.
“We’re all just college students, too. It’s impossible
to be an expert on something you only entered into a few years ago,”
he added.
WOBC
has 30 days from the order’s release date on Nov. 7 to either
pay the full amount demanded or to request permission to pay under
an installment plan. Otherwise, the case will be sent on to the
Department of Justice. |