KOCE to layoff one employee
Marisa O’Neil
The KOCE-TV Foundation hopes to take ownership of the station and
slash its operating budget by $2 million on July 1 with only one
person being laid off.
That feat will be accomplished through 14 retirements, two
resignations and 18 employee transfers, 10 to other areas in the
college district and eight to the foundation’s payroll.
The foundation, which formerly served only as the station’s
fundraising wing, is expected to take over the station’s operations
at the beginning of July. Coast Community College District is selling
the station to help ease its own budget constraints.
Most KOCE-TV employees, who actually work for the district, are
taking advantage of early retirement or severance packages. Others
are transferring to jobs with the foundation.
“A lot of people loved working for KOCE,” station President Mel
Rogers said. “But because the district [retirement] package is so
much better than you can find in corporate America, a lot of people
had to move over there for their financial well being.”
Of the 14 people taking advantage of retirement packages four of
those in management positions have been asked to work for the
foundation in their retirement. One worker in a management position
is being laid off, according to district reports, two are taking
lower positions with the district and two are transferring to the
foundation.
All 10 of the remaining classified employees, who work in
nonmanagement positions, will transfer to other jobs in the district,
said district spokeswoman Erin Cohn.
Some KOCE-TV employees, like camera operators and engineers,
belong to a union called the International Alliance of Theatrical
Stage Employees. Of those, eight are retiring, two will work for the
foundation and two took a severance package.
“A lot [of positions] will be filled by part-time employees
because they didn’t require full-time,” Rogers said. “We have a lot
of automation that doesn’t require as many people [to run].”
Donations from members, for example, are entered by volunteers and
fully tracked on a computer.
In the past, he said, people had to manually run tapes for the
station’s programming schedule. Now the station’s master control is
fully automated, as are those in most television stations, he said.
The foundation is waiting for approval from the Federal
Communications Commission for the license transfer from the district.
Once that is final, the foundation’s remaining $7.9-million down
payment is due.
A superior court judge ruled last month that the district was
within its rights to accept the foundation’s bid, most of which will
be financed. Spurned bidder Daystar Television Network, which had
sued for the right to buy the station, has appealed the decision.
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