Our Vision for 2022 and Beyond

We are members of KPFA, listeners and staff, who oppose the efforts of some current station board members to break‐up the Pacifica Foundation and operate KPFA as a stand‐alone station.

As KPFA and Pacifica gravitate farther away from the 1949 original mission of opposing all war, we need your support to start re-organizing all five Pacifica stations to slow the march toward a state of perpetual war.

The false economy of eternal war concentrates wealth farther up the scale, leaving a growing disadvantaged population with less economic opportunity.

KPFA and Pacifica have the capacity to confront the war machine, as was proven when the stations contributed significantly to the end of the Vietnamese war and toll of death and distraction across Southeast Asia.

●  KPFA management’s cancellation of several programs, like Guns and Butter, Counterspin, and Workweek that challenge government war policy typifies this devolution and drives a steady decline in paying memberships.

KPFA management’s shift to merely reporting on global deterioration, rather than opposing it, means that members must demand a return to regularly exposing and confronting self-serving lobbyists and politicians. As it stands now, KPFA could easily be confused with the voice of the Democratic Party.

Please join with Rescue Pacifica to restore KPFA to the watchdog we need.

Together we must demand:

●  Dispense with corporate wire services like AP and Reuters (Reuters literally helps ICE track undocumented immigrants through their corporate parent) in favor of using independent-only and alternative news sources.

●  Reach out to diverse community groups to help us make programming together that speaks to their issues, their way, instead of just having people on as guests. KPFA should have regular co-generated specials with groups organizing their communities to go deep on local issues.

●  Expand into video when appropriate. Digital cameras are easy and portable, bandwidth is cheap and sometimes you need to SHOW what you are describing. Clinging to parochialism about format is a recipe for failure. Content can be and should be multilayered and multimedia.

●  No censorship. Broadcasts that don’t match the mission statement and offend community standards should be dealt with in the context of community board or a program council that, free of workplace politics, can measure content against articulated goals and decide if it is found wanting. Abrupt hierarchial decisions just create nepotism, fear of upsetting the boss and self-censorship. Risk taking should be encouraged. We want to air things now that 50 years later will still be frighteningly ahead of their time. We did it once, and we can do it again.

●  Forget commercial underwriting. It’s a nice idea, but sponsoring a program means it belongs to the entity that pays for it. The programming has to belong to all of us.

●  Practice radical transparency about governance. Post all the votes with names in a place easy to find. Post the station’s budgets and actual results compared to the budget in a place easy to find. Report to the members like they own the place, because they do.

●  Keep the Pacifica Foundation intact. No one ever owned the very few pieces of mass media infrastructure not captured by six huge corporations and decided “eh, who cares, too much trouble”. A nationwide voice is impossible to replace and once lost, will never ever be reinstated. Care for public assets, value them and use them to make big trouble.

KPFA Subscribers – Defend Your Right to Vote! Preserve Your Local Station Board! – Vote NO!

Dear KPFA subscriber,

You’ll be receiving a ballot on Tuesday, Feb. 18 asking you to approve or reject a replacement set of bylaws for the Pacifica Foundation, KPFA’s parent organization.

Please vote, and vote NO on this poorly-thought-out plan!

After the infamous 1999 takeover attempt at KPFA, new bylaws were put in place providing for Local Station Board (LSBs), elected by subscribers and staff, at the five Pacifica stations. 

Representatives from the five LSBs then constitute the Pacifica National Board (PNB),which sets network-wide policies.

The replacement bylaws would turn back the clock, by making most PNB seats filled by appointees, not elected representatives. And the Local Station Boards would disappear entirely.

Without a local station board, where will KPFA listeners take their concerns about programs or other issues? And who will hold local management to account?

So to maintain the right to elect Local Station Boards in the future, KPFA subscribers need to reject the replacement bylaws.

Your “no” vote protects your right to vote in the future.

At least one supporter of the replacement bylaws has been proclaiming “listener democracy has failed.”

We at Rescue-Pacifica believe instead that KPFA and Pacifica need more democracy and participation, not less. For example, we call for the restoration of a Program Council, so that management cannot unilaterally cancel valuable programs without explanation (as just happened to KPFA’s only labor show).

There’s also no doubt that the Pacifica stations, and the network as a whole, are confronting severe financial problems. But eliminating locally-based listener democracy won’t solve those problems.

Many KPFA staff members and local community activists, including Dennis Bernstein, Mary Ratcliff, Michael Parenti, Miguel Molina, Marilyn Langlois, Eduardo Martinez, Peter Phillips, Mickey Huff, and many others are urging a NO vote on the replacement bylaws; see the list at www.rescuepacifica.net
So please take a moment to vote, and vote against turning back the clock!

Keep KPFA and Pacifica moving forward.

Rescue Pacifica

If you would like to contribute to the Rescue Pacifica Voter Education Project to defeat these substitute bylaws, you can do so here.

rescue-pacifica-logo-color-2-x-2-1-e1581872544103 KPFA Subscribers – Defend Your Right to Vote! Preserve Your Local Station Board! – Vote NO!
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Statement on October 2019 WBAI Raid

To give a quick update on Pacifica news: the raid on WBAI was permanently reversed by NY State Supreme Court judge Melissa Crane on November 6, 2019 and WBAI returned to the airwaves at midnight, exactly one month after IED Vernile pulled the plug. Vernile’s employment at the Pacifica Foundation has been terminated. 

The Rescue-Pacifica candidates vigorously condemn the shutdown of KPFA’s sister station WBAI in New York City. On October 7, there was an attempt by Pacifica’s interim Executive Director (“iED”) to close the station and terminate all WBAI staff. This surprise attack took place in the middle of WBAI’s fall fund drive, as well as the voting period for the Local Station Board elections. It is completely at odds with what democratic, transparent and responsible governance should look like, and contrary to Pacifica’s original grassroots mission. Fortunately, a New York judge issued a stay to prevent iED John Vernile from dismissing the WBAI workers and interfering with the station’s operations, pending a hearing to be held on October 18th.


 For long-time KPFA supporters, the attack on WBAI should bring back unhappy memories of the 1999 takeover attempt at KPFA. The cast of characters is different this time, but the objective appears to be the same – to replace local community-based hosts with shows piped-in from elsewhere, and perhaps to eventually sell the station’s valuable broadcast frequency.The attack on WBAI is the latest in a series of recent undemocratic actions to happen recently at the network. A group calling itself “Restructure Pacifica” has been circulating a petition to replace the present Bylaws with a system that would eliminate listener-elected Local Station Boards. There is also an attempt underway to remove KPFA board member Tom Voorhees from the Pacifica National Board, despite Tom’s unmatched knowledge of radio.The Rescue-Pacifica candidates for the KPFA Local Station Board believe that KPFA and its sister stations should uphold the values of democracy, transparency, and community-based decision making. We oppose undemocratic power grabs, including the attempt to close WBAI.

Report from Pacifica National Board Director Tom Voorhees can be read here. 

rescue-pacifica-logo-color-2-x-2-2 Statement on October 2019 WBAI Raid
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“DISCLAIMER: This is not an official Pacifica Foundation website nor an official website of any of the five Pacifica Foundation radio stations (KPFA Radio, KPFK Radio, KPFT Radio, WBAI Radio, WPFW Radio). Opinions and facts alleged on this site belong to the author(s) of the website only and should NOT be assumed to be true or to reflect the editorial stance or policy of the Pacifica Foundation, or any of the five stations (KPFA Radio, KPFK Radio, KPFT Radio, WBAI Radio, WPFW Radio), or the opinions of its management, Pacifica National Board, station staff or other listener members.”

Between The Minutes: Notes from KPFA Board Meetings

by Daniel Borgstrom

Notes on what happened at the LSB of January 11, 2020
— Getting Tom Voorhees on the PNB
— Rejecting the Bylaws change
— Another program taken off the air

Not a lot of drama at this day’s meeting, but two important things were decided.  First of these was to choose four reps to the PNB (Pacifica National Board).  That is one of the most important decisions the LSB makes each year.  Other LSB tasks are to evaluate the General Manager and also the Program Director — neither of whom have been evaluated for some time.

There are 24 seats on the board, and our affinity group, Rescue Pacifica, has 8 of these seats.  So logically we could get one of our people, Tom Voorhees, on the PNB.  But there was a potential glitch — the majority faction, the UIR/SK, had made multiple attempts to force Tom off the PNB.  First, a couple of years ago, they had launched a series of lawsuits.  I’ll spare you the excruciating details on that and just say they failed, and Tom kept his seat on the PNB.  Then, during the takeover of WBAI in New York, one of the takeover-team (Donald Goldmacher) attempted to remove him from the PNB.  No grounds for that were ever given, and the matter was dropped, but it was quite clearly because Tom was one of the PNB members who refused to go along with the takeover of WBAI.

So we considered it possible that the majority faction, (the UIR/SK) might find a pretext to block Tom from running.  Well, they didn’t.  So today Tom Voorhees was elected to another year on the PNB without any fights or drama.

(UIR/SK is United for Independent Radio/SaveKPFA; both UIR and SK are deceptively named, adapted from the names of opposing groups.)

The other two listener reps chosen today for the PNB were Chris Cory and Akio Tanaka, both of the UIR/SK.  (Donald Goldmacher, who’d been one of their PNB reps last year and played a prominent role in the takeover, didn’t run for the PNB this time.)

One staff rep was reelected: Sabrina Jacobs.  She was the acting chair of the PNB during the takeover of WBAI in New York.

(Please note that I’m trying to use a neutral term for the month-long takeover of WBAI.  The takeover team euphemistically calls it “the October attempt to save Pacifica,” and we call it “the coup” or “the hijacking of WBAI.”)

THE PACIFICA RESTRUCTURING PROJECT
That concluded what is normally considered one of the LSB’s most important tasks of the year.  Then we had another agenda item of major importance.  That was a motion to endorse the “Pacifica Restructuring Project.”  If enacted, this project will bring about a total change in Pacifica’s bylaws, replace elected boards with ones where most seats will be appointed.  LSBs of the other Pacifica stations are also voting on it; WPFW and WBAI have already rejected it unanimously.

The motion was presented by LSB members Susan da Silva, Akio Tanaka, and Donald Goldmacher.  Donald participated remotely by speaker phone.  The motion read:

“Be It resolved that the amended Pacifica Bylaws submitted to the Pacifica National Board in September 2019 by more than 1% of the Pacifica members, and subsequently accepted by the Pacifica National Board, be enacted as soon as possible.”

Although almost everyone recognizes that the PNB is dysfunctional, the proposed restructuring will take out the democracy without remedying the problem.  That was our view, so we opposed it.  However, there were only 8 of us, and while I can’t say what the others of our affinity group may have expected (after all, nobody likes to say a fight is lost before you fight it), I thought this awful thing was certain to pass.  After all, the deep station at KPFA was home base for last fall’s takeover of WBAI, and now this.

Discussion on that began at 1 p.m. and continued for nearly an hour.  Everyone spoke, and as they spoke, one after another, it began to look like we were not totally alone in opposing it.  To my surprise, even Sabrina Jacobs (former spokesperson for the takeover of WBAI) opposed it, as did several others of the LSB majority.  So as the discussion drew to a close, it looked as though this just might be close to a tie. (There is just too much said in that discussion to even try to quote here. I recommend listening to it on the archive at https://kpftx.org .)

Then came the vote:
4 in favor
13 no
4 abstained
Motion failed.

This should’ve been a roll call vote.  It was not.  Three of four who voted yes were Susan, Aki, and Tim; I’m not sure who the fourth was.  Quite strangely, it appears that Donald Goldmacher hung up and left without bothering to vote for that motion which he’d put so much of his efforts into.

So KPFA’s LSB did not endorse the Bylaws changes, the “Pacifica Restructuring Project.”  Nevertheless, our station’s General Manager Quincy McCoy announced over KPFA’s airwaves: “Members of the PNB voted on the proposed new bylaws & the LSBs are now voting and so should listener-members” — possibly giving the erroneous sense that the proposal was well received.

There was also a second motion by Susan, an addendum to the first:  “Be it resolved that the delegate members of the KPFA LSB believe the Pacifica membership should have a right to vote on the current bylaw proposal submitted by membership petition in September 2019.”

Discussion opened and James McFadden of Rescue Pacifica said,  “I recommend that we abstain on this motion.  It is meaningless grandstanding that wastes LSB time. The current bylaws define when a listener election is required.  This is an attempt to include propaganda.”

No one else spoke on that motion, and we voted:
5 in favor.
14 abstained.

It was two o’clock.  The meeting took a break, then continued on for another hour.  Next on the agenda was “Public Comments,” which is normally near the beginning of the meeting.  Two people from the audience spoke: Stan Woods and Anthony Fest, both former LSB members.

“First off I want to congratulate the board for voting down the Corporate Model proposed Bylaws,” said Stan Woods, and then commented on the station’s sparse coverage of the antiwar movement. “KPFA has always been known as the antiwar station. Not so much anymore! … KPFA has rarely had genuine anti-imperialist, antiwar activists on the air recently, instead preferring guests that MSNBC or NPR would have no problems with. One blatant example is the frequent appearance of Professor Karen Greenberg [Director of The Center on National Security] who in response to a question from myself stated, ‘We should never forget that the FBI or CIA are there to protect us!'”

Across from Stan sat board member and KPFA show host Philip Maldari.  Just the previous Sunday, Philip had hosted Karen Greenberg on his show, but she’s been on at least once since then.  Some have joked that she’s on so often she might as well have her own show.

The second speaker, Anthony Fest, talked about KWMR, a community radio station at Point Reyes and Bolinas, which operates on $400,000, only about 12% of what KPFA spends.  Not peanuts, but it showed that a community radio can run on a lot less than we might think necessary.  In addition to about 95 adult volunteers, the station also had junior high and high school students performing as deejays.  Maybe KPFA should consider something like that; it could generate interest among young people.

General Manager Quincy McCoy was absent.  Business Manager Maria Negret wasn’t there either.  So treasurer Sharon Adams gave the treasurer’s report along with a bit of obligatory WBAI bashing.  There were no financial spread sheets.

Chris Cory, chair of the PNB’s National Finance Committee, reported that Pacifica has hired a new iCFO, Anita Sims.  She works for NETA (National Educational Telecommunications Association), and was the supervisor of her predecessor; so Ms. Sims is familiar with Pacifica.

Near the end of the agenda was an item listed as: “Old Business: Motion concerning PNB Directors.”  That’s the way the secretary listed it, giving no indication that it’s a motion Rescue Pacifica introduced in December; the item should have read: “Motion to consider the censure of Donald Goldmacher for accusations that could have tarnished the reputation of fellow PNB member Tom Voorhees during a Pacifica election.”  The LSB didn’t get to it last month, nor at this meeting.  So it’ll just continue to stay there, possibly to the discomfort of some.

The meeting adjourned at 3:15, having lasted 4 hours.
— — — — —

THE MONDAY MORNING AFTER
On Monday the 13th, just two days after the LSB meeting which General Manager Quincy McCoy did not attend, he took yet another show off the air.  This latest target is “Work Week,” hosted by Steve Zeltzer, the only show on KPFA devoted to labor issues and probably one of the very few if not the only show specifically on labor in the Bay Area.  For a so-called progressive station to terminate coverage of such an important and under-covered subject indicates that KPFA is joining the class war on the wrong side.

Lacking any explanation from the GM, this could be seen as a retaliatory measure; Steve is a former LSB member who raised uncomfortable questions, and recently he was interviewed on WBAI in a discussion of the Coup.

During the last couple of years, General Manager McCoy has taken several programs off the air; these include “Guns & Butter,” “Discrete Music,” and “Twit Wit Radio.” McCoy’s biggest takedown was last October at KPFA’s Pacifica sister station in New York, WBAI 99.5 FM, where former iED John Vernile appointed him “Consulting Programmer of Pacifica Across America.”  In that capacity McCoy replaced all local programming on WBAI’s airwaves with piped in programs and awful machine music.

KPFA is now playing a cart with the lines, “Quincy McCoy, our terrific general manager.”

This “terrific” GM needs to be evaluated by the LSB.  That’s one of the duties of the LSB, long overdue.

***** ***** ***** ***** *****
Here are KPFA’s current officers and new PNB reps:
LSB chair: Christina Huggins — UIR/SK
LSB vice chair: Marilyn Langlois — Rescue Pacifica
LSB secretary: Carol Wolfley — UIR/SK
LSB treasurer: Sharon Adams — UIR/SK

KPFA’s Pacifica National Board (PNB) reps:
Tom Voorhees — Rescue Pacifica
Chris Cory — UIR/SK
Akio Tanaka — UIR/SK
Sabrina Jacobs — UIR/SK

The eight RESCUE PACIFICA persons on the KPFA LSB are: Frank Sterling, Marilyn Langlois, Tom Voorhees, Karina Stenquist, Mantra Plonsey, James McFadden, Christine Pepin, and myself Daniel Borgström.

— — — — — —
DANIEL BORGSTRÖM
member of KPFA’s Local Station Board
with input from members and supporters of Rescue Pacifica

For updates, reports, audios, & essays about KPFA/Pacifica, please visit these websites:

RESCUE PACIFICA  https://rescuepacifica.net

PACIFICA IN EXILE http://pacificainexile.org

AUDIO ARCHIVES of LSB meetings at https://kpftx.org

DANIEL’S SITE http://danielborgstrom.blogspot.com/

1999 redoux?

A faction  of the Pacifica Foundation National Board illegally shutdown the New York Pacifica station WBAI on Monday October 7, 2019. They improperly  ordered Pacifica engineers  and staff to rip out the computers, shutdown the WBAI website and turn the broadcast station into a repeater station. They also improperly set up a consulting company called “Pacifica Across America” with KPFA manager Quincy  McCoy as a consultant to determine programming. 

This is the corporatization of KPFA and Pacifica.  It took place during a national election at all Pacifica stations and a national  fundraising campaign, and has already cost Pacifica and KPFA tens of thousands of dollars.  This action also violated the AFTRA-SAG union contract by giving no notice of the terminations and closure of the station, although required under the contract.  A majority of the Pacifica National Board have now overturned these actions, but those who  took this action must be held accountable. 

Additionally at KPFA, this rogue faction is seeking to remove Pacifica KPFA Board representative Tom Voorhees from the KPFA board at a secret meeting on October 26, 2019 to support their faction and coup at WBAI.  We must PACK the meeting and speak out against the coup.

Press Conference At KPFA LSB Meeting
Saturday October 19,  2019 10:00 AM
South Berkeley Senior Citizens Center
2939 Ellis St, Berkeley, CA 94703

Meeting starts at 11:00 AM

Closing of WBAI ???!

The Rescue-Pacifica candidates vigorously condemn the shutdown of KPFA’s sister station WBAI in New York City. On October 7, there was an attempt by Pacifica’s interim Executive Director (“iED”) to close the station and terminate all WBAI staff. This surprise attack took place in the middle of WBAI’s fall fund drive, as well as the voting period for the Local Station Board elections. It is completely at odds with what democratic, transparent and responsible governance should look like, and contrary to Pacifica’s original grassroots mission. Fortunately, a New York judge issued a stay to prevent iED John Vernile from dismissing the WBAI workers and interfering with the station’s operations, pending a hearing to be held on October 18th.

For long-time KPFA supporters, the attack on WBAI should bring back unhappy memories of the 1999 takeover attempt at KPFA. The cast of characters is different this time, but the objective appears to be the same – to replace local community-based hosts with shows piped-in from elsewhere, and perhaps to eventually sell the station’s valuable broadcast frequency.

The attack on WBAI is the latest in a series of recent undemocratic actions to happen recently at the network. A group calling itself “Restructure Pacifica” has been circulating a petition to replace the present Bylaws with a system that would eliminate listener-elected Local Station Boards. There is also an attempt underway to remove KPFA board member Tom Voorhees from the Pacifica National Board, despite Tom’s unmatched knowledge of radio.

The Rescue-Pacifica candidates for the KPFA Local Station Board believe that KPFA and its sister stations should uphold the values of democracy, transparency, and community-based decision making. We oppose undemocratic power grabs, including the attempt to close WBAI.