Local bid still on for KOCE
- Share via
Marisa O’Neil
Orange County’s only public broadcasting channel, KOCE, plans to stay
in the running to retain its broadcast license in an upcoming sale,
despite a split with co-bidder KCET, the local station’s president
said.
Representatives for the Los Angeles-based public broadcasting
channel, KCET, announced Monday that the channel and the KOCE
Foundation had mutually agreed to dissolve the partnership it had
forged to put in an $11-million bid to retain KOCE’s format.
KOCE President Mel Rogers said that he did not see the latest
development as a setback.
“The good news is that the [KOCE] Foundation is putting together a
stronger bid than originally proposed and has a chance of winning,”
Rogers said. “It’s not out of the question that we have a chance to
win.”
In its announcement, KCET cited a short lead time as the reason
the partnership did not work. The Coast Community College District,
which holds the license, requires all bids to be submitted
simultaneously on Oct. 8.
“It boils down to the fact that the new process Coast Community
College District implemented makes it virtually impossible for a
joint bid to get done in time,” said Barbara Goen, KCET’s senior vice
president of communications.
The KOCE-KCET joint bid was the lowest of five presented to the
college district board, which will decide the station’s fate at its
Oct. 15 board meeting. Representatives from the district have said
that, because of state budget cuts affecting colleges, they can no
longer afford the $1.7 million it spends annually to operate the
station.
The two highest bidders are Costa Mesa’s Trinity Broadcasting
Network and Daystar Television Network of Dallas, each offering $25
million in cash. All of the four bidders besides KOCE are religious
broadcasters.
Rogers said that the KOCE Foundation is forming a bid to be
submitted by the Oct. 8 deadline. He said that it will use some
physical and intellectual property assets to come up with a bid
“quite a bit higher” than its original.
“The KOCE Foundation would be the designated purchaser of the
broadcast license and would, in effect, be buying it on behalf of the
people of Orange County,” he said.
Despite the KCET deal falling through, Rogers and Goen both said
the channels would consider future collaborations in programming,
management or operations.
“KCET has indicated that it is happy to assist the KOCE Foundation
in any way we can,” Goen said. “We are eager to be helpful as the
process unfolds.”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education and may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.