Judge’s ruling clears way for sale of KOCE
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Marisa O’Neil
Orange County residents will finally have a station to call their own
when the KOCE-TV Foundation takes the reigns of Orange County’s only
PBS channel later this year.
The foundation came one step closer to sealing the deal Monday,
when a superior court judge denied Christian broadcaster Daystar
Television Network’s claim that Coast Community College District
should have sold the station to them and not the foundation. That
ruling helps clear the way for the foundation to move ahead with
fundraising and planning programs for their anticipated June
takeover.
“Now we’re focusing on nailing the money,” KOCE-TV President Mel
Rogers said. “We’ve had a lot of people waiting in the wings for
resolution, now we’re trying to raise as much money as possible.”
Private and corporate donations will augment a loan the foundation
is securing for the $8-million down payment, which is due once the
Federal Communications Commission approves the license transfer --
estimated to take place in 60 to 90 days. Several banks have offered
loans, foundation President Bob Brown said, and they are just
hammering out one last detail on a $10-million loan.
The college district, which is selling the station it could no
longer afford to support, set a June 10 deadline for the foundation
to provide proof it has secured a loan.
KOCE-TV will run a tighter ship, Rogers said, and will reduce its
operating costs from $8 million annually to about $6 million. That
means letting about 20 people go, he said, though most are eligible
for retirement or transferring to other jobs within the district. He
expects to lay off only three or four employees.
The station will also have to consider whether it wants to stay in
its current location, on the Golden West College campus, or find a
new home.
New programming will roll out gradually, he said.
“You’re not going go blink your eyes June 30th and have the new
KOCE,” Rogers said. “These things take time.”
Multiple projects are in the works, said foundation member Joel
Slutzky, including expanded local news coverage and programs with
more of an Orange County angle, in addition to regular PBS
programming.
“The new KOCE is going to creatively engage the communities we
serve,” Slutzky said. “We want to cover arts, education and the
environment and want to do it in a very entertaining way.”
They also want the “Real Orange” news program, which airs
weeknights and mornings, to include more coverage of events in the
community. He said they are exploring different ways of doing that
until they can purchase trucks equipped for remote broadcasts from
the field.
Slutzky hope is to fill the local news void left by the Orange
County NewsChannel, which went off the air in 2001 because of
financial problems.
“Orange County is the only community [of its size] in the country
that doesn’t have its own commercial news coverage or 24-hour cable
news station,” said Rick Reiff, executive editor for the Orange
County Business Journal. “The closest thing to its size is Long
Island, which is a captive of the New York market, like we’re a
captive of the Los Angeles market. It’s slightly smaller than Orange
County but it has a 24-hour cable news channel.”
Reiff is seeking sponsors for a program that will profile local
residents and businesses on KOCE-TV. He described the show as a cross
between CNBC’s “Hardball with Chris Matthews” and KCET’s “Visiting
... with Huell Howser,” which visits Los Angeles communities.
Daystar is planning to appeal this week’s decision, but that would
not affect the license transfer, said Milford Dahl, an attorney for
the district. Judge Corey Cramin’s opinion, Dahl said, left little
room for legal maneuvering.
Attorneys would have to prove the judge misinterpreted the law to
get an appeal, Dahl said. But, because the appeal process can take up
to two years, that could keep everyone on pins and needles even after
the foundation takes control of KOCE-TV.
“To hold this up for two years wouldn’t be good for the community
and the school,” Dahl said.
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