FEMA refuses to help local PBS affiliate rebuild

by dunkelberg | August 27, 2008 at 07:33 am
283 views | 4 Recommendations | 5 comments

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FEMA refuses to help local PBS affiliate rebuild

FEMA refuses to help local PBS affiliate rebuild

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uploaded by CJaye

On the air, WYES-Channel 12 looks fine.

Everywhere else, the local PBS affiliate's headquarters near City Park, devastated by 5 feet of Hurricane Katrina levee-failure floodwaters, remains a literal shell of its former self.

Katrina water wiped out the station's office space, taking with it files and video archives.

Only the station's cinder-block studio, built in 1957, stands where more than 50 employees once worked.

Though the old studio serves as the production site for pledge-drive programming and locally produced shows like "Steppin' Out" and "Informed Sources," most of the station's current staff of about 40 work out of leased office space in Metairie. Detailed plans for a new facility sit in a cabinet there.

WYES' staggering recovery mirrors that of many of its viewers. Because the station's transmitter and tower survived the storm with minimal damage, its broadcast signal was restored in December 2005, but Federal Emergency Management Agency assistance that would've begun making the station's physical plant whole hasn't come through.

"All the records for the station were lost. All our computers were lost," said Randy Feldman, general manager. "There was muck everywhere.


The nonprofit station's ordeal with FEMA is a "Frontline" episode in itself.

In essence, Feldman said, FEMA rejected providing the station with recovery money because it's not an educational institution or arts organization (despite its on-air torrent of educational and arts programming) and doesn't provide essential emergency communications service (despite participating in the Emergency Broadcast System).

There are precedents for FEMA helping public-TV situations in similar straights, Feldman added, but the station's appeals process with the government has been exhausted. Intervention efforts by members of Louisiana's congressional delegation have proved fruitless.

"You only get two appeals," Feldman said. "It always has seemed to me that the proper role of government ... is to find ways of helping, and what FEMA seemed to be saying is, 'We're the government, and we're here to find ways not to help you.' And that's just wrong."

"FEMA has been extraordinarily creative and flexible in its application of public assistance funding in Louisiana and the Gulf Coast, and if there was a way FEMA could've assisted WYES-TV with public funding, we would've found it and applied it," said Bob Josephson, director of the office of external affairs for FEMA's Louisiana transitional recovery office, via e-mail.


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CJaye
CJaye
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 07:58 on August 27th, 2008

dunkelberg, I like this story. It's good stuff. I want to leave you with a link to pictures of FEMA trailers that will never be used sitting in Hope, ARK. six million dollars worth! Thats why PBS can't get help the same for others.  They let those trailers set until they sunk so deep into the mud they can't be moved.

link:

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CJaye

Ghosties again it won't let post link I'm going to try here      http://tinyurl.com/5wbeyf

 

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dunkelberg

Thanks for your flag and contributions.

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Monte

dunkelberg, very good article. The current administration, and a number of past ones, have tried to make PBS and their affiliates toe to the administration's opinions. Usually failing miserably. Yes FEMA does admirably in finding funds for public institutions after a disaster, NOT finding funds in this case is just a show of petty politics to which the administration seems to excel at.

Emilio Lizardo
Emilio Lizardo
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 09:48 on August 27th, 2008

dunkelberg, I like this story. It's good stuff.

This is a great thing to bring to our attention!

And the worst thing about it is that nobody's accountable ! It will all be written off as just another unfortunate failure of the system ...

It's really a crazy way to run a railroad ...

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