An Indiegogo fundraising campaign launched recently has just 2 months to reach its goal of $15,000.... If not, well....then we all lose....
I mean, you have
to show that you want it. It’s just one of those things. Kinda
like a library, or a museum, or a neighborhood park space. You can be getting so much
more out of your music listening experience.... You can get an endearing sense of
community…You can learn about local events, you can gain new perspectives....
That’s if the
current Indiegogo campaign for
Ferndale Community Radio can raise enough funding to facilitate installation of
an antennae tower and the equipping/furnishing/supplying of a decent studio
space.
“Our mission is to
bring the community closer together as a radio station,” said Michelle
Mirowski, President/General Manager of Ferndale Community Radio, a Michigan
nonprofit working toward setting up a local station inside the Rustbelt Market.
“It is all about community for us, there’s no reason for us to start this in
the first place if there was not a community-centered mindset. It’s in our
name: “Ferndale COMMUNITY Radio…, that’s what drives us.”
Chris Best, co-owner/manager of the Rust Belt Market, expressed considerable enthusiasm for partnering with FCR. In fact, it was initially in the Rust Belt's business plan, to eventually help set up and host a community radio station, they just hadn't anticipated the harder parts of jumping through the various hoops required to get that FCC approval... That's where Mirowski and her team come in!
The effort started
several years ago, sprung from a casual conversation concerning just how cool
it would be to have a free-form radio station, something with the enthusiastic
verve and empowering edge of a college station, only this time have it hosted
in a city with the cultural richness and unique character of Ferndale and have
it be able to promote local events, feature local organizations and showcase
local artists, while also playing an eclectic and refreshing blend of music.
In 2013, the federal
government opened up the FM airwavefor the first time since the late 90’s,
offering licenses for frequencies across the dial to any number of aspiring
groups looking to set up their own low-power (100-watt), noncommercial radio
station.
Ferndale Community
Radio’s board of volunteer specialists include Mirowski, her husband Dave
Phillips (a journalist who will be covering news & community affairs for
the station), and Jeremy Olstyn (who has substantial experience managing high
school radio programs and will head programming and future training for FCR).
Dave Kim, meanwhile, comes to the team with several years’ experience,
including working in commercial and promotional radio, like 89X. They also have
a certified radio engineer on the team, an integral component in helping with a
particularly exacting part of the application process. Suffice it to say, there
is decade’s worth of experience and know-how shared between the Board behind
FCR.
If you were to put the
FRC team into a functioning studio, with a transmitter, and help hook them up
with an insurance plan and royalties system, then they’d be delivering exciting
and engaging programming almost instantly! They’re ready to go; they know what
they’re doing! They just need YOUR help…
Mirowski wants you to
realize how rare of an opportunity this is… The FCC doesn’t just hand out these
licenses willy-nilly… “The fact that we got this far and that the FCC said: Yes….
That’s ridiculous,” she’s got an excited and motivated smile, the disbelief
still having not faded for them. “What we have right now? Is a ridiculous
opportunity! But we have to be up and running soon. We have to be streaming
24-7 by September and we need to get all the equipment up way before that. We
have to do tests of the frequency to make sure everything’s good and then there’s
always any kind of other delays we can’t anticipate. Plus, we have to order
parts, and that could take a few months…”
So… The sooner Ferndale
chips in, the better!
In fact, if there was
one dollar, just one dollar given, for every person living in Ferndale, then
they’d more than reach their goal. (Of course, I’m counting babies and
kindergartners in that scenario, but STILL…) “This might actually be the only
chance for Ferndale to have a community FM station. The 100.7 frequency might
not be open anymore if we miss this, because they’re (the FCC) changing
different structures of (the dial). And if we don’t get the funding, it’s not
like the FCC is going to say: ‘Oh, take your time, we’ll just hold onto this
for you…’ We’d have to wait until this window of opportunity opens again…” And
that could be several years. This is it, Ferndale.
There’s no backup-plan,
per se. They don’t want to do podcasts, they don’t want to do just online radio, they want to give you
a terrestrial radio, something you can tune in to while you’re driving down 9
Mile or chilling at home. They could become an Internet Radio Station, if they
wanted, but that would mean higher royalties required to music distribution
companies. If they keep it at this trajectory, just 100-watts from their
hopefully-soon-to-be-erected-tower, coupled with their nonprofit status, then
they can keep those royalties to a more affordable rate.
But they need that
$15,000 goal to get off the ground, not only to fund the furnishing of their
studio, but to also demonstrate that this is something the community wants,
something the community will likely continue to support two years from now,
three, five….ten!
This is it… Your chance for the city to have its own
community radio station. No corporate sponsors, no moneyed interests. Just
passionate people doing it for the love of it and implicitly directing their
efforts towards promoting local events, local artists, local businesses, local
organizations…ALL FERNDALE. Right here. What do you say?
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