Archive for November, 2010

Continuing Coverage of KTRUgate

The Daily Cougar: “Group of students voices its opposition to KTRU acquisition at Board meeting

Multiple students consecutively spoke to the straight-faced board members at the Wednesday meeting, and each student expressed a loss of confidence they had in the institution. Many UH students referred to the deal as a “black eye” on the university.

Nick Cooper, Rice alumnus and member of the local award-winning jazz band Free Radicals, told UH Regents they should “be ashamed at the way the situation was handled.”

Cooper said the loss of KTRU would be a monumental blow to local musicians like himself who gain exposure through the student run station.

Reactions have been similar throughout the UH community.

“As a communications student at UH, I am disheartened by our administration’s underhanded dealings,” Vincent Capurso, a volunteer D.J. at KTRU, said. “Is this what we are teaching business majors, deception?”

The Rice Thresher: “Open records requests unveil how KTRU sale was kept under wraps

In addition to these details regarding the sale’s disclosure, the two open records requests revealed an incongruency between one of Leebron’s points supporting the deal and the timeline of relevant events.

Burn Down Blog: “When did Rice first try to sell KTRU?

Rice should take the higher ground and release all of its information about the KTRU sale. If the sale is truly justified, then the facts should speak for themselves. Let Rice justify this sale, just as Rice students must justify their arguments in classes. If the university cannot do that, then this course of events will be tainted through Rice’s history as one of its lowest hours, unable to even meet the same standards it holds for its students.

YouTube: “KTRUgate: The Animated Series

To speak at the UH Board meeting…

Please contact UH’s Director of Media Relations ASAP if you’d like to speak during the “open forum” part of the UH Board of Regents meeting tomorrow:

Richard Bonnin
713-743-8155
rbonnin@uh.edu

Attend the UH Board of Regents meeting this Wednesday

The University of Houston Board of Regents has a quarterly meeting this Wednesday at 1:30 pm. As a public institution, its meetings are free and open to the public.

http://www.uhsa.uh.edu/regents/calendar/

BOARD OF REGENTS MEETING
November 17, 2010, 1:30 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
University of Houston-Downtown
Special Events Center
Academic Building, 3rd Floor
One Main Street, Houston, TX 77002

Please come to the meeting and show your support for KTRU. The agenda (available here) includes an “Open Forum”. Here is your opportunity to respectfully tell the Regents your opinion of the proposed sale.

Media Coverage of KTRUgate

Texas Watchdog: “University of Houston practiced deception, cooked up ‘cover story’ as it closed deal to acquire Rice University’s KTRU radio station

The University of Houston plotted to keep its acquisition of Rice University’s student-run KTRU radio station secret as long as possible — going so far at one point as to encourage lying to Rice students about why an engineering consultant needed access to the station, e-mails obtained by Texas Watchdog show.

“The underlying paper work is being drafted to mislead people or throw the effort off the track of the public,” said Larsen, the public records lawyer.

Huffington Post: “University Of Houston Deceived Students As It Closed Deal To Acquire Rice University’s KTRU

“The longer we wait (for an agreement) the higher the likelihood of one of the ‘campus constituencies’ causes a problem for Rice, which could disrupt the transaction,” reads an April 5 e-mail to UH officials from an agent at Public Radio Capital

Houston Press: “Texas Watchdog: U Of H Covered Up KTRU Purchase Plans

Published this morning, Steve Miler’s report cites emails from employees at Public Radio Capital to both U of H officials and the consultants hired by Rice that appear to recommend both universities work together to avoid tipping off KTRU’s staff, the student bodies and the public to the impending sale. One recommends Rice create a “cover story” relating to why an engineer was visiting KTRU to evalute its assets.

Texas Watchdog: “University officials plotted, bickered as KTRU sale to University of Houston finalized

As the sale of Rice University’s student radio station KTRU to the University of Houston was finalized this summer, public relations teams from the University of Houston and Rice worried over possible leaks of the news and an ensuing “press frenzy.”

The deal didn’t get out for another week, and UH’s effort to keep the $9.9 million sale from the public until the last possible minute succeeded. At one point, an agent of the school encouraged Rice to concoct a “cover story” to keep students from guessing the real reason a consultant needed access to the KTRU station, Texas Watchdog reported Thursday.

The meeting of the finance and administration committee included some testy moments, although it was not covered by any media outlet. … “The vote was not unanimous,” Bonnin wrote to Thrane. “One of our regents opposed the proposal and asked very pointed and probing questions. It’s fortunate that no media attended.”

Houston Chronicle reporter Jeannie Kever had been told of the deal, according to an e-mail to everyone from Bonnin, and had agreed to withhold the information until Aug. 17, the day of the Board of Regents meeting. … We will not distribute the release until after the [UH Board of Regents] vote,” Bonnin instructed.

Houston Press: “Rocks Off Threw Wrench Into U of H & Rice’s Secrecy Plan

These emails encouraged U of H to concoct a “cover story” to mask its intentions to purchase the largely student-run station, whose staff was kept completely in the dark about the ongoing negotiations.

… it turns out, they already had an agreement with the Houston Chronicle to “embargo” the story until the day of the regents’ vote …

Houston Press: “Rice, UH Officials Made Embargo Agreement With Chronicle On KTRU Story So They Could Have ‘A Quiet Weekend’

… the Houston Chronicle’s initial reporting on Rice’s controversial sale of KTRU to UH was glowingly positive, at least in part because of a deal where the paper agreed to hold the information until the schools wanted it released.

[Thrane] suggests keeping the lid on internally as much as possible until the board meeting to approve the deal. “That way we don’t risk the KTRU folks going into full roar, and triggering a press frenzy, ahead of your regents’ action.”

Keeping the Public in Public Radio: “‘Because I Said So’

Such, then, is the final word of the ham-fisted bureaucrats at Rice University in the ongoing public relations disaster that has been the impending sale of KTRU, the student-run 50,000-watt radio station in Houston. Bumbling from one mealy-mouthed rationale to the next …

The Rice Thresher: “Public information request reveals Rice-UH KTRU email correspondence

Recently the Thresher was given access to a collection of email correspondences pertaining to the sale of KTRU’s transmission tower, broadcasting license and frequency [obtained by] filing an open records request. The information below will update throughout the week, and a succinct overall analysis will appear in next week’s print and web issues.

Burn Down Blog: “Growing opposition to the KTRU sale OR Know Your FCC Commissioners

The fact that someone with direct experience serving as an FCC commissioner shows that KTRU has a chance. Someone whose job it was to regulate license transfers expressly opposes the KTRU sale.

Where are the blessings of localism, diversity and competition here? I see centralization, not localism; I see uniformity, not diversity; I see monopoly and oligopoly, not competition.

KTRU student management condemns Rice, UH’s deception

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Joey Yang, KTRU Station Manager
Tel: 614.423.9264
Email: joey.yang@gmail.com

KTRU student management condemns Rice, UH’s deception in KTRU deal
Texas Watchdog excerpts show both institutions colluded to conceal negotiations

HOUSTON, TEX– KTRU’s student management and the members of Friends of KTRU, a group of students, alumni and community members dedicated to stopping the sale of the radio station’s assets, strongly condemn the actions taken by Rice University and University of Houston to conceal the KTRU deal.

“Today’s article in the Texas Watchdog reveals just how desperate Rice and UH were to keep the pending KTRU deal under wraps,” said KTRU Station Manager Joey Yang. “From making up cover stories in order to mislead KTRU staffers, to using false call letters to keep KTRU out of the public record, it seems the administrations of both universities were trying to deceive Rice students and the general public. Their actions demonstrate a questionable commitment to openness and transparency.”

The full article can be found here:
http://www.texaswatchdog.org/2010/11/university-of-houston-practiced-deception-over-Rice-University-KTRU-sale/1289434596.story

Yang urged anyone concerned about the pending KTRU sale to participate in the FCC’s public comment period, which runs until Dec. 2. Information about how to contact the FCC, your local congressperson, and spread the word is located at:
http://savektru.org/help/

Time to contact Congress

Right now, it’s also extremely important to support KTRU by calling or writing to key Congressional offices, and asking them to put pressure on Rice and U.H. to stop the sale.

Tell them any or all of the following:

  • It’s not in the public interest to allow KTRU to go off the air, which would result from FCC approval of the license transfer.
  • Houston is better served by KTRU’s unique locally produced programming than by additional nationally syndicated programs under KUHF/KUHC’s plan.
  • Radio is important to you, and shouldn’t be viewed as a “declining asset”.
  • Rice & U.H. formulated their deal in secret, preventing any input from the students, faculty or alumni of either university, or the station itself, or the Houston community.
  • There has been an accelerating trend of NPR stations gobbling up community radio stations across the country, leading to less locally produced programming.

The most important offices to contact are:

We have written a sample letter to aid you in this endeavor. Feel free to use it (in whole or in part) in your own letter or email, or just as guidance for your own email, letter, or telephone call. Also, for easy copy/paste action, please click here for the sample letter as a RTF file (rich text file), which should open in most text editors, such as WordPad, TextEdit, or Microsoft Word.

Please note: Replace the bracketed text with the appropriate information. If contacting Senator Hutchison, further change the text as appropriate (i.e. “Senate Office Building”, “United States Senate”, “Dear Senator”).

The Honorable [Full name]
[Room #] [Office building name] House Office Building
United States House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515

I am writing to you to express my strong opposition to the University of Houston System’s purchase of KTRU, Rice University’s student radio station. As someone who cares deeply about the Greater Houston community and importance of free speech, I implore you to use your influence to communicate to the University of Houston and Rice University that the license transfer should be stopped.

Rice University students founded the university’s FM radio station, KTRU 91.7 FM, in 1971. Ever since, it has served the greater Houston community with its unique programming. KTRU has also provided students with irreplaceable media training and leadership opportunities. The University of Houston plans to eliminate KTRU’s locally-produced programming and replace it with nationally syndicated programs produced by National Public Radio, the BBC, and other networks with limited connection to the Houston community.

The Rice University administration and the University of Houston reached an agreement to sell KTRU’s license and transfer through a secret process with no student or community input. Rice University President David Leebron justified the sale on the basis that KTRU is a “declining asset”, yet he made no attempt to work with the student management to find ways to increase the station’s value or seek other opportunities to obtain more value from the university’s licensed radio spectrum. Radio is more valuable than ever, and I do not want to lose KTRU’s important voice.

The proposed radio license transfer is currently being considered by the Federal Communications Commission.

Please immediately communicate to the University of Houston and Rice University that the license transfer should be stopped.

Sincerely,

[Your Name]
[Your Address]
[Your Phone Number]
[Your Email Address]