WGXC

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L-R, Andrew Joffe, Ann Forbes Cooper, and Joan Geitz perform a radio play at WGXC's first broadcast live from the Catskill Community Center, Sat. Feb. 26. Photo by David LaSpina/David Bush.

Since Saturday, WGXC has been broadcasting on 90.7-FM. If you have tuned in, at times the signal may have sounded spotty or weak. We’re working all the time to make it sound better, and here is an explanantion from Andy Gunn, a technical advisor for WGXC who is on the board of free103point9, which holds the license:
Right now you might be wondering why you can get the signal in some places, but can’t get it in others. There are a few reasons. For one, WGXC has a directional antenna. Which means the signal is stronger in some directions, over some other directions. This is because we have to protect [the signal's of] some other broadcast stations in the area. There is also an initial period where the Federal Communications Commission mandates we operate at half-power while some paperwork is filled out. That may take a few weeks, but once that paperwork goes through, we will be allowed to turn the transmitter to our fully allowed power. You should be able to receive the signal better once that happens. That said, there are always some initial glitches, so be patient while we work out the kinks in the system. Hopefully we wil be able to get the signal up and strong in as many areas as we can. In the meantime, reports of where the signal is strong and where it is weak will help us determine where we might need to fix a few things. You can call the WGXC studio line at 518-828-0290 with reception reports, or e-mail info@wgxc.org or tweet @wgxc. We hope we can get you a strong, clear signal in the very near future.

Some of the reports of very good reception have included: Germantown, Cairo, Valatie, Claverack, Coxsackie, Chatham, Medusa, Hunter, Windham, Kinderhook Lake, and Philmont.

In Athens, Hudson, Catskill, and Saugerties, it is coming in, but perhaps not so clearly yet.

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The National Weather Service says today will be mostly sunny with times of sun and clouds. High 29F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph. Tonight, mainly clear skies. Low 7F. Winds NW at 5 to 10 mph.

Town meetings tonight
HUDSON Economic Development Committee meeting starts at 6:00 p.m.
PHILMONT Planning Board Meeting, 7:00 p.m. at Village Hall, 124 Main Street
STUYVESANT Zoning Board of Appeals meeting, 7:00 p.m. at Town Hall
TAGHKANIC Planning Board meeting, 7:00 p.m. at Town Hall
COLUMBIA COUNTY Economic Development Committee at 5:00 p.m.

Astronomical bodies
TIDES
Hudson: Low, 12:25 p.m./High, 6:12 p.m.
SUNRISE/SUNSET
6:41 a.m./5:36 p.m.
MOONSET/MOONRISE
8:38 a.m./11:28 p.m.

Birthdays
FEBRUARY 22 Arthur Shopenhauer, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Ishmael Reed, Drew Barrymore, and Ernie K-Doe.

Tune in today
WGXC MORNING SHOW Reed Ismael and Jackie Thomas read the news, take calls, play music, introduce volunteer’s work, and more. 6-8 a.m.
DEMOCRACY NOW! International news. 8-9 a.m.
BLIND SPOT David LaSpina and David Bush host a show about photgraphy. 2-3 p.m.

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It is President’s Day. Lots of places are closed.

The National Weather Service has issued a Winter Weather Advisory through 3 p.m. Monday and they predict snow, mainly before 1 p.m. High near 27. Light wind becoming north between 10 and 13 mph. Chance of precipitation is 90 percent. New snow accumulation of one to three inches possible, to add to the one to three inches our area saw overnight. Tonight, partly cloudy skies early will give way to cloudy skies late. Low 12F. Winds N at 5 to 10 mph.

Town Meetings
AUSTERLITZ Town Hall closed during day, comprehensive Plan meeting tonight at 7:00 p.m., 812 Route 203, Austerlitz

Astronomical bodies
TIDES
Hudson: High, 5:15 p.m./Low, 11:54 p.m.
SUNRISE/SUNSET
6:43 a.m./5:34 p.m.
MOONSET/MOONRISE
8:04 a.m./10:13 p.m.

Birthdays
FEBRUARY 21 Andres Segovia, Anais Nin, W.H. Auden, Nina Simone, David Foster Wallace, and Jerry Harrison.

Tune in today
WGXC Morning Show Host Philip Grant and Board Operator Norman Keyser read the news, take calls, introduce segments, play music, and update the weather. 6-8 a.m.
Democracy Now! International news live at 8 a.m.

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The National Weather Service says today will be mostly sunny, with scattered clouds. High 34F. Winds NW at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be cloudy with snow developing after midnight. Low 26F. Winds N at 5 to 10 mph. Snow accumulating 1 to 3 inches, then continuing tomorrow morning towards a total accumulation of 3 to 6 inches, tapering off in the afternoon.

Astronomical bodies
TIDES
Hudson: High, 4:21 p.m./Low, 11:08 p.m.
SUNRISE/SUNSET
6:44 a.m./5:33 p.m.
MOONSET/MOONRISE
5:33 a.m./8:57 p.m.

Birthdays
FEBRUARY 20 Sidney Poitier, Ibrahim Ferrer, Patty Hearst, Rihanna, Mitch McConnell, and Kurt Cobain.

Tune in today
JUAN SANCHEZ Spanish-language show. 2-4 p.m.
LE LI, LI TAN Haitian-Creole show hosted by Carline Murphy and Azouke. 4-4:30 p.m.

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The National Weather Service says today will be partly cloudy with times of sun and clouds. High 54F. Winds light and variable. Tonight partly cloudy skies during the evening giving way to a few showers after midnight and tomorrow. Low near 40F. Winds light and variable. Chance of rain 40 percent.

Town meetings tonight
ANCRAM Board meeting with public hearings beforehand on raising property tax exemption levels at 7 p.m. in town hall on CR 7.
CHATHAM Town Board Meeting at 7 p.m. town hall, 488 State Route 295, Chatham.
COPAKE Comprehensive Planning Committee meeting at 7:30 p.m., Town Hall.
DURHAM Town board meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Town Building, 7309 State Rt. 81, East Durham.
GHENT Public Hearing before the Town Board of the Town of Ghent, to be held at the Ghent Town Hall, Route 66, Ghent, New York, on February 17, 2011 at 7:15 p.m. to consider a Resolution which would raise the maximum amount of yearly income for real property tax exemption for persons sixty-five (65) years of age or over from $26,000.00 to an amount not to exceed $29,000.00, and to consider an increase in the yearly income ceilings for partial exemptions for persons with yearly income greater than this amount, but less than an amount to be established by the Town Board which amount will be no greater than $37,399.00. 7:15 p.m. at Ghent Town Hall, 2306 State Route 66. Ghent.
VALATIE Neighborhood Watch Meeting at 7 p.m. at Barnwell
WINDHAM board meeting 8 p.m. at Town Hall, Hensonville.
COLUMBIA COUNTY Public Safety Committee meeting at 6 p.m.

Astronomical bodies
TIDES
Hudson: High, 1:55 p.m./Low, 8:51 p.m.
SUNRISE/SUNSET
6:49 a.m./5:29 p.m.
MOONSET/MOONRISE
6:01 a.m./5:03 p.m.

Birthdays
FEBRUARY 17 Lola Montez, Chaim Potok, Michael Jordan, Billie Joe Armstrong.

Tune in today
WGXC MORNING SHOW Mark Lacoy and Casson Kennedy host with reports from Stockport, Albany, Ulster County, Hudson, and other towns, with Catskill Mountainkeeper’s Program Director, Paul Smart’s phone call, and more. 6-8 a.m.
TELL IT LIKE IT IS The Tell It Like It Is crew welcomes the author of Cancer Kickin Warrior, Inez Whitehead-Dickens, and Samaritan Hospital oncology nurse, Barbara McHale to talk about cancer survivor support services. Your calls, with comments or questions, are welcome starting at 11 a.m. 518-828-0290.
CROSSROADS Alan Skerrett’s weekly jazz-and-more show, noon-2 p.m.
THE JAZZ DISTURBANCE Cheryl K’s weekly jazz show, 7-9:30 p.m.
1969 The Magic Stranger takes you back to the Summer of ’69. 9:30 p.m.-midnight.

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The National Weather Service says today will have possible on and off snow flurries with variably cloudy skies. High 42F. Winds SSW at 15 to 25 mph. Tonight will be cloudy. Low 34F. Winds SSW at 10 to 20 mph. Expect scattered showers tomorrow. Rain, that is.

Astronomical bodies

TIDES
Hudson: High, 9:53 a.m./Low, 5:32 p.m.
SUNRISE/SUNSET
6:54 a.m./5:24 p.m.
MOONRISE/MOONSET
12:16 a.m./3:58 a.m. Monday

Birthdays
FEBRUARY 13 Thomas Robert Malthus, Grant Wood, Stockard Channing, and Peter Gabriel.

Today on WGXC
The Score Film score show from Margo Pelletier and Lisa Thomas. 11 a.m.
The Jackie Thomas Show Music and more. Noon-2 p.m.
Mark Read Show Alex Malmude also hosts this music and more show. 5-7 p.m.
The Irish Show Cairo’s Tony Fallon plays music and reports scores from Ireland. 7-9 p.m.

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Homelessness Marathon banner, by Jeff Rountree.

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development announced a series of grants to keep local homeless assistance programs operating, although last year HUD gave our area substantially less funding. The Mid-Hudson News Network reports 16 programs have received $1.2 million in Dutchess County. In Orange County, 14 programs received $1.9 million. In Westchester County, 42 programs received $11.3 million. In Ulster County, nine programs received $1 million. Columbia and Greene counties together had only four programs that received a total of $110,000. Read the rest of this entry »

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WGXC will go on the air on 90.7-FM Sat. Feb. 26, with a free public event at the Catskill Community Center. Brian Dewan, Kyle Esposito, Deena Rae Turner, Pamela Pentony, Finley & Pagdon, The Olde Tyme Love Machine, Rob Hervey, C.B. Smith & the Lucky Devils, and others will perform at the event, which will be beamed to over 78,000 possible listeners in Columbia, Greene, Albany, and Rensselaer counties. The event will be held from 2-6 p.m. and there is no admission fee. The event will also include:
•a youth open-mic, showcasing our community’s young talents;
•a chance to meet the station’s programmers, volunteers, staff, and Radio Council;
•recording and interview booths–hear yourself on the radio!;
•a sound jungle, and other activities for kids;
•a potluck dinner–bring a dish to share.

Here is an audio recording of Brian Dewan performing “Our Ever-Improving Village,” one song he might play live on 90.7-FM from the Catskill Community Center Sat. Feb. 26.

Our Ever Improving Village by Brian Dewan, recorded at WGXC “Defrost” benefit March 20, 2010 at Spotty Dog Books & Ale in Hudson.

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Eleanor Kagen interviews participants in the WGXC/Prometheus Barnraising in Hudson Sept. 24-26, 2010.


Eleanor Kagen came to the WGXC/Prometheus Barnraising in Hudson Sept. 24-26 and recorded lots of interviews with organizers and participants. Then she visited the events’ organizers, the Prometheus Radio Project, at their Philadelphia headquarters, and collected more audio stories of community radio. Kagen edited it all together into this piece, “Raising Barns, Raising Voices.” Click on the photo of Kagen recording sounds at the barn raising to hear the mp3 recording.

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National Public Radio reporter Rick Karr came to Hudson in late September for WGXC’s “Station Barnraising,” but current events pushed the piece he recorded then to the side. Now, current events have brought it back, as Karr packages his recordings from Hudson with what is going on nationally with the LPFM bill to allow more community radio stations across the country currently struggling in Congress. This evening “All Things Considered” aired Karr’s reporting which quotes Bill Lawrence, a Republican Greene County Legislator from Cairo who will be one of WGXC’s “Morning Show” hosts; WGXC Executive Director Galen Joseph-Hunter; free103point9 board member Andy Gunn; and also a clip from a crowd during the WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising in September. Click here to listen to the story. Click here to read Watershed Post coverage of NPR story.

Read the rest of this entry »

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2.1 percent tax hike in Greene County, no layoffs
Colin DeVries in The Daily Mail and Ariel Zangla-Girard in The Daily Freeman both report the Greene County Legislature‘s 2011 budget includes a 2.1 percent tax increase, and no layoffs in a tentative $99.7 million budget. “A budget hearing is scheduled for Nov. 18 in the Cairo-Durham High School, 1301 Route 145 in Durham, at 6 p.m. Copies of the budget are available in the legislature office on the fourth floor of the Greene County Office Building at 411 Main St., Catskill,” DeVries reports. The The Daily Mail story includes tax rates for each town.

Greene biomass study results coming
The Daily Freeman reports the results of the Greene County Forest and Agriculture Biomass Resources Study will be presented at 4 p.m. Wednesday at the Agroforestry Resource Center, 6055 Route 23. “Dan Conable from Cato Analytics will present the study, which was prepared by Cato Analytics and Clark Patterson Lee. The full report is available online at www.greeneida.com,” the paper reported.

Road closures
The Columbia Paper reports The Columbia County Department of Public Works closed the county bridge that carries Stone Mill Road Extension over the Taghkanic Creek (locally known as Hildebrandt Bridge, in the towns of Greenport and Claverack) November 1, after the DOT deemed it unsafe. Since alternate routes are available and county funds low, the bridge will not be rebuilt and the nearby intersection of Yates Road and State Route 9H will also be closed to traffic. The Register Star reports, “The northernmost section of Mt. Merino Road may soon be closed to traffic, Greenport Highway Superintendent Mark Gaylord said Wednesday. He has authority to close the road if travel on it is not safe. The three-mile-long road has only two outlets, the other being west of the intersection of Route 9G and Route 23.” The story reports recurring flooding problems there.

Hole in the news
On Saturday, The Daily Mail reported about journalist Amy Goodman’s talk and book-signing for WGXC at the Community Theatre of Catskill last Thursday without mentioning WGXC. On Monday, The Daily Mail, in a story about the Sunday showing of Tobey Carey’s film “The Catskill Mountain House and the World Around” at the same Catskill theater reported, “The film was a production of Willow Mix Media, a not-for-profit arts group, and proceeds of DVD sales go to the Greene County Council on the Arts.” The Goodman appearance was a production of WGXC, and proceeds from admissions at the talk went to the station. “Democracy Now!” will air live on WGXC Monday through Friday at 8 a.m.

First snow
WGXC heard reports of snow throughout Columbia and Greene counties, with a bit of accumulation on the ground in higher altitudes, with salt trucks spotted spreading in both counties.

Birthdays
Today is the birthday of Lou Ferrigno, Spiro Agnew, and Ejiah Parish Lovejoy.

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Amy GoodmanAmy Goodman spoke for WGXC tonight at the Community Theatre of Catskill (photo by Galen Joseph-Hunter). Kaya Weidman, Christina Malisoff, Brian Kehoe, and Carline Murphy introduced the “Democracy Now!” host before her talk, which can be heard here, or copy and paste the following url into your computer’s media player:

http://archive.free103point9.org/2010/11/AmyGoodman_CommunityTheatreofCatskill_WGXC_110410.mp3

“Democracy Now” will air on WGXC-FM 90.7 live at 8 a.m. Monday through Friday.

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Video from the WGXC studio build live from WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising Sun. Sept. 26 from the WGXC Hudson studio. Listen and watch as Dan Meredith from the New America Foundation shows WGXC’s Al Davis and Tom Roe how to use Campcaster, the open source automation system volunteers installed over the course of the weekend Barnraising.

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Video of the dinner plenary Sat. Sept. 25 at St. Mary’s Academy in Hudson during the WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising includes Pamela Badila, Norman Douglas (in screen shot above), and other WGXC programmers.

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WGXC announces its initial program schedule today at the end of the WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising. Much of the schedule still needs to be completed. Click on images to enlarge.

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WGXC Hudson studio built during WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising Sept. 24-26.

Photos from WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising, Sept. 24-26 at various locations in Hudson, New York.

Ryder Cooley at the Meshell Ndegeocello WGXC fundraiser at Club Helsinki. Photo by Alan Korn.

WGXC's Hudson studio is almost done being built. The console moved on to the table this afternoon.

Alan Korn posted this photo of the WGXC Hudson studio entrance. Korn was the lawyer that represented WGXC's successful application for the 90.7-FM frequency.

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Media activist Dee Dee Halleck at the WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising Sat. Sept. 25, was interviewed by a representative from the Sanctuary for Independent Media in Troy, NY. Halleck spoke about the FBI raid yesterday of the homes of six political activists in Minneapolis in connection with a terrorism investigation. Many computer files were seized.

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A music video made from the WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising in Hudson, NY, Sept. 25, 2010. Screen shot above includes Sakura Saunders of Prometheus Radio Project working in the new WGXC Hudson studio.

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Sara Kendall and Ngonda Badila chat about the WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising at a Sept. 20, 2010 WGXC volunteer meeting.

WGXC volunteers and staff from the Prometheus Radio Project finalized details of this weekend’s WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising at WGXC’s Hudson studio Monday night. The conference, workshops, skill shares, and studio building will be done at various sites in Hudson, New York this weekend. Bottom photo, WGXC volunteers Norman Douglas and Kieran Riley help organize the WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising at a Sept. 20, 2010 WGXC volunteer meeting. Photos by Andalusia Knoll of Prometheus Radio Project.

WGXC programmer Juan Sanchez and Prometheus Radio Project's Cory Fischer-Hoffman at a WGXC volunteer meeting to work on the WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising.

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WGXC/WORD! show kicks off the WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising Friday night with free admission at 7:30 p.m. at Cannonball Factory, 359 Columbia St. in Hudson. Celebrating text+sound and word+music. Curated by Lee Bradshaw, Jeffrey Lependorf, Sam Truitt, and Chad Weckler.

WGXC: Hands-On Radio, a new community radio station serving Greene and Columbia counties, will soon go live. On Friday, September 24, WGXC and the Prometheus Radio Project present an evening of free performances kicking off the WGXC/Prometheus Radio Station Barnraising (September 24-26). Drawing on the high concentration of literary and musical talent in the area, WORD! pairs some of the counties’ most lauded writers with exceptional musicians and electronic soundscapes. The collaborations created for WORD! celebrate the magic of spoken words with music and the power of the sung word. These include everything from “Baconist” Paul LaFarge reading to the sizzling sound of frying bacon and poet Rebecca Wolff reading along with the haunting vocals of Lady Moon (Ngonda Badila) to short story virtuoso Nelly Reifler reading with Japanese bamboo flute master player Jeffrey Lependorf and multi-instrumentalist extraordinaire Rob Caldwell playing along with readings from Finnish poet Catharina Gripenberg and Catalan poet Gemma Gorga Lopez. These collaborations and others will be followed by a musical set featuring some of the hottest urban sounds around, including hip-hip legend Sean Delaney, R&B
sensation TIMOtion, and the luscious pop vocals of Anneice Cousin. Throughout
the evening, performance artist Kathe Izzo—The Love Artist—will appear “unbound.” The evening can also be heard on www.WGXC.org.

The complete list of performers: Robert Caldwell, Cooga, Anneice Cousin, Sean Delaney, Denero Man, DW Gibson, Catharina Gripenberg, Dave King, Paul LaFarge, Jeffrey Lependorf, Rachel Levitsky, Gemma Gorga Lopez, Lady Moon, Phil “The Guitar Man,” Nelly Reifler, Julian Seidenberg, TIMOtion, Sam Truitt, Van Diesel, Rebecca Wolfe, plus The Love Artist “Unbound.” More information: 518-291-WGXC

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Workshop descriptions follow for the WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising Sept. 24-26 in Hudson, New York:

Friday, Sept. 24
1-2:45 p.m.

Automation: The In/Visible Programmer
Nick Ring (WBCR)
Automation system keeps the music and the programming going even when you can’t have a live DJ in the studio. Learn how automation can help your station be on the air ‘round the clock.

Drawing out the Wisdom in Groups and Meetings
Cory Fischer-Hoffman (Prometheus), Andy Turner (Cornell Cooperative Extension/WGXC)
This workshop is designed to give people the opportunity to explore different tools for working with groups. Through participatory exercises, sharing, and reflections we will learn together about techniques that can
be useful in any group, and especially when facilitating or leading workshops. Anyone who wants to begin to build on their skills for working with groups as well as experienced facilitators are welcome.

The Campaign for More Low Power Radio
Pete Tridish (Prometheus), Diane Foglizzo
The Local Community Radio Act is getting close to the finish line! The bill has only a few months to pass before the legislative session ends, and we would have to start from scratch. If you would like to start a community radio station in your town, or want your LPFM station to be treated with more respect by the government, this is the workshop for you! Learn more about how you can get involved to help pass the LPFM bill once and for all, and also view testimonials from the People Powered Radio Project.

Radio Theater Workshop
Andrew Joffe (WGXC)
Radio Theatre is a key component of any community radio station. station. Thespians and non-theatre people alike, come join us to help to produce a radio play for our opening broadcast on Sunday! You can then utilize all your radio drama experience to produce radio in your own communities.

Arts & Crafts: Making Banners for Barnraising
Kids track.

The Nuts and Bolts of Building Your Base
Twa-le Abrahamson, Kaya Weidman (WGXC)
Is anyone listening? Facilitated discussion about strategies for diversifying listener and membership base for a community radio station.

3-4:45 p.m.

Build an Itty Bitty Transmitter, Part 1
Pete Tridish, Allan Gomez, Sharp Hall
This is a hands on workshop where we will build some of Tetsuo Kogawa’s “simplest transmitters.” These transmitters have 12 parts and run on a nine-volt battery. They have a microphone and can be hooked up to an audio source and broadcast up to about 30 feet, if the wind is blowing right. They are great for learning the building blocks of radio electronics. We will also work on slightly larger versions which will be used in the launch event.

The Nuts and Bolts of Building Your Base
Twa-le Abrahamson, Kaya Weidman (WGXC)
Is anyone listening? Facilitated discussion about strategies for diversifying listener and membership base for a community radio station.

Prison Radio: Connecting Families
Nick Szuberla, Lillie Branch-Kennedy, Marcie Crim Thousand Kites
Join this exciting workshop that explores the power and impact of producing grassroots programming for those inside our nation’s prisons. Learn strategies for working with families and friends of prisoners in a process of creating powerful cultural and human rights programming that bring communities together. Participants will learn approaches to building local community support, as well as outreach strategies to prisoner families, corrections staff, and prisoners. Media examples, and stories, will be shared, along with a series of hands on exercises that will explore different approaches for creating programming for your station.

Fighting Poverty and Media Injustice
Aliza Dichter, Tina Sharpe, Antoine Haywood
What’s needed to solve poverty-related problems in our region, and what’s the media role? From phone costs and affordable internet to information access and media coverage, what are the issues for our neighbors struggling to become self-sufficient and improve their life conditions? What can we do as community media builders?

Making Speakers with Electromagnets
Kids track.

Hosting a Show and Sounding Good
Karen Michel, Sakura Saunders
What’s the role of a radio host? How much is pre-scripted, how much extemporaneous, how much does it matter? Differences between dj-ing, talk, and news shows. Using your voice to create conversation and a connection with the audience: some voice exercises, some practice.


Saturday, Sept. 25
9:15 – 11 a.m.

Build an Itty Bitty Transmitter, Part 2
Pete Tridish, Tianna Kennedy (free103point9)
This is a hands on workshop where we will build some of Tetsuo Kogawa’s “simplest transmitters.” These transmitters have 12 parts and run on a nine-volt battery. They have a microphone and can be hooked up to an audio source and broadcast up to about 30 feet, if the wind is blowing right. They are great for learning the building blocks of radio electronics. We will also work on slightly larger versions which will be used in the launch event.

Covering the Distance: Rising to the Challenge of Rural News Coverage
Paul Smart (WGXC), Lisa Phillips
Rural news unfolds at its own pace in a somewhat archaic mix of monthly meetings, sudden news events, cultural activities, and corrosive rumors. Yet today’s listeners also want to hear the loud issues of the day reflected in what they hear. This seminar presentation by two veteran rural news editors and reporters, from both the print and radio worlds, will explore the ways in which rural population’s news needs are met in an entertaining and enlightening fashion, highlighting the many challenges inherent in this often-overlooked niche market. Facilitated discussion will expand the workshop’s horizons to engage participants’ questions and suggestions.

Interviewing and Recording for Community News
Anabel Khoo, Candace Mooers
Learn how to present a focused brief news/current affairs radio interview that inspires social change. It includes a section on pre-interviews, the difference between a topic and a focus, how to order your questions, and interviewer etiquette for allied media-makers. Also, learn how to capture the best sounds for radio using a digital recorder. Participants can attend the Digital Editing workshop to learn how to edit their pieces.

Legal Clinic for Non-commercial Broadcasters
Michael Couzens, Alan Korn
Key Legal Topics, Mainly Intended for Programmers and Hosts: Inde-
cency – Safe Harbor – Underwriting Announcements – Political Broadcast-
ing – Copyright – Program Ownership – Libel and Slander – FCC Record
Keeping and Compliance – Using the FCC Data Base and FCC Web Site.

The Long March to Community Media
DeeDee Halleck, Nicole Hummel
Community media can take many forms– from scroll painting singers who go village to village in India to laser graffiti against the World Bank in Korea. This workshop will see samples and discuss how people around the world communicate to their villages and barrios.

Listen Up!
Karen Michel, Adi Gevins
We are our own worst critics. In Listen Up! participants will bring work in
progress, completed work, ideas to hear and discuss. Adi and Karen will
also bring some pieces they think are transcendent radio to listen to and
feed from. Please note this workshop will not be at St. Mary’s but instead
take place nearby at 348 Warren St Hudson, NY 12534

11:15 a.m.– 1 p.m.

Antenna Masts, Towers and Poles
Al Davis (WGXC), Allan Gomez
The most important factor in radio coverage is height of antenna. So how are you going to hold that thing up? Get the skinny on tall things.

Volunteer Love: Preventing Burnout
Aliza Dichter, Sandra Valentin
A strategy session to develop recommendations for the radio station and other groups on how to support and sustain each other as volunteers, plus ideas for groups and services that can help.

Oral History Workshop: Method and Practice
Suzanne Snider
The workshop will be a whirl-wind tour of all that oral history has to offer us. We’ll cover interview techniques, ethics, and oral history project design, with an eye/ear toward the exciting ways in which radio can make use of oral history and vice versa. We’ll discuss life histories, community histories, family histories, institutional histories, testimony, and other sub-categories, while looking at the range of subjects that oral history can address (public health, war crimes, gentrification, memory…). I’ll be introducing some innovative and unusual project designs, including the oral history chain letter.

Radio as a Tool to Organize and Build Community/Radio: una Herramienta para Construir Comunidad
Oscar Otzoy, John Jairo, Candace Mooers, Andalusia Knoll (Prometheus)
What is community radio’s role in community transformation? How are radio stations across the country using innovative programming to strengthen community organizing? In this bilingual session, Oscar Otzoy
from the Coalition of Immokalee Workers will speak about the role their LPFM station Radio Conciencia has played in their fight for economic justice, John Jairo from Radio Callejera will share stories about radio and immigrant rights and Candace Mooers will talk about the role radio plays in Anti-Poverty organizing in Canada. This discussion will be moderated by Andalusia Knoll of the Prometheus Radio Project. Participants will walk away prepared to utilize radio in their hometowns in ways that serve to catalyze community engagement and empowerment.

Start a Summer Radio Camp for Youth
Aaron Lakoff, Neil Griffith
This workshop will cover the ins and outs of creating a fun and enriching summer program for youth at your community radio station. For the last two years, CKUT radio in Montreal has been running week-long sessions for teen-agers to come in, get hands on experience, and go on the air with their own productions. The camp councilors from CKUT will share their experiences with this radio camp (and some audio clips of the kids’ productions too) in the hopes of inspiring other stations to start their own.

Get on FM: Legal and Tech Clinic
Gavin Dahl
Representatives from groups with FCC construction permits will have the opportunity to ask experienced engineers and attorneys all their legal and technical questions. What does the FCC think about this? How do you get your signal over a mountain?

Movement and Music Theater
Kids track.

1–2 p.m.

NCE Full Power Caucus
This will be an opportunity for new NCE Full Power stations to share their experiences applying for licenses, getting CP’s and getting on air including challenges, success stories and more in an informal lunch caucus setting.

2–3:45 p.m.

Building Your Station’s Web Presence
Galen Joseph-Hunter (free103point9), Gabriel Farrell (WGXC)
How do you integrate your website into your general station operations and engage your audience through it? How do you link it to social media, live and pre-recorded programs, community calendars and more. Listen to
a few case studies of stations similar to yours who have built themselves successful websites and online communities and are developing new programming using online technology.

Calm Down, Breath, Now Let’s Talk About the Conflict
Erubiel Valladares Carranza II, Melissa Roberts Weidman
This is a workshop that is interactive with attendees; Warning! high emotions, some profanity and a new way to learn and most importantly having fun while doing so. Conflict inevitably arises in every organization and
project, and radio stations are no exception! It’s how we deal with and address those conflicts that make the difference in whether they become crises that wear people out, or opportunities to learn and grow the relationships that make a project flourish. Come learn about conflict resolution techniques and communication strategies from some folks who’ve worked as mediators, and first hand from a member of KPCN in Woodburn, OR about conflicts that have arisen there and how they’ve dealt with them. This will be an interactive participatory workshop.

Organizing Your News Department
Vanessa Graber, Molly Stentz
To prepare newsroom producers and aspiring newsies for planning, producing, and leading an effective community news operation.

Making Policy that Works for Us
Brandy Doyle
How will communities access spectrum in the future? Who should be eligible for an LPFM license? What can we do to protect our stations from encroachment? This workshop will focus on the policy issues that matter
most to this community. After tallying the votes for a participatory workshop agenda, we’ll facilitate a conversation about our shared priorities and policy goals.

Youth Radio
Emily Bennison
For teens interested in learning how to produce a radio show, this is the workshop for you! Brainstorm ideas for show segments, listen to examples from other youth producers, hear from experienced producers, and
practice making radio.

Making Musical Instruments
Kids track.

4–5:45 p.m.

Intro to Audio
Stephanie Alarcon, Robin Collier
What are all these audio plugs and how do they work? How does my voice get from a microphone to speakers? How can I keep feedback from ruining my day, and why can I use headphones as a mic in a pinch? Come learn the basic science of sound, how to wire up a mixer, and how to troubleshoot common audio problems. We promise that by the end you’ll know an RCA cable from an XLR.

Behind the Scenes: Community Approaches to Radio Governance
Norm Stockwell, Sharmeen Khan
You got the license, the equipment and the people but how do you organize the station? This workshop will look at various ways of organizing the structure of your station, governance models and ways of getting things done. This workshop will also address how to create egalitarian and empowering stations when you have a combination of staff, volunteers and board members.

Digital Editing with Free Software/ Edicion Digital con Software Libre
Ana Martina, Vanessa Graber
In this workshop you’re going to experiment mixing and editing sounds, and words, the raw material radio!! Create your own audio collage with a free software open source, you don’t have to pay or have any brand computer to create your audio masterpiece! Close your eyes and open your ears. Ideal for those who attended the interviewing workshop who can then learn to edit their pieces.
En este taller vas a experimentar con mezclando y editando sonidos y palabras. Puedes crear su propio arte de colaje con software que es gratis. Sierra sus ojos y abran sus orejas. Este taller es ideal para los que van
a asistir al taller de intrevistas porque pueden aprender como editar sus piezas.

Inclusive Media in Divided Communities
Marcie Crim (WMMT)
This workshop will focus on the ways WMMT is in constant negotiations with staff, programmers, and listeners in order to be truly “fair and balanced” in an extremely polarized region.

Hacked FM Transmitters: ExiTrip
Ed Bear, Lea Bertucci (free103point9 Fellows)
For this workshop, we will teach participants to hack the iTrip Nano so it will work with audio inputs other than the iPod. By repurposing this device, we give new life to an otherwise obsolete generation of consumer
electronics, expanding its potential for subversive and creative actions. No prior electronics experience is necessary.

¿No pasa naranja? La noticia explicada
Mariel Fiori (Bard College, WGXC)
Todo periodismo empieza con la noticia ¿Pero qué es la noticia? ¿Lo que se lee en los diarios? ¿Lo que el editor dice que es noticia? ¿Cómo se escribe una noticia? ¿Qué es la estructura de la pirámide invertida? A través de ejercicios prácticos y divertidos en el taller responderé a estas preguntas, y otras que puedan tener los participantes.


Sunday, Sept. 26

9:15-11 a.m.

Streaming and Podcasting
Ana Martina, Fred Nagel
In this workshop you are going to learn how to do audio streaming, that means to broadcast live to all listeners with access to internet in the world. Also you will set up your Podcast, so if listeners don’t have time to be in front of a computer, they can just download your show, and take it with them in their audio device.

Grassroots Fundraising Strategies
Twa-le Abrahamson, Norm Stockwell
Most community stations do it. So should you. For many stations, this is the biggest fundraising strategy and the way they acquire the most new members. When you’re trying to reach people, remember, you run a radio station. Get on the air and ask for what you need! We will provide an overview of the questions your group needs to ask and the preparations that need to be made before undertaking this. We will also have some short video clips from an on-air fund drive that has taken place a week before this training event at a community radio station in Spokane, WA.

Asuntos Comunitarios
Jose and Rosa Briceño
Asuntos Comunitarios. Una charla que toca estas temas: ¿Como podemos ayudar nuestra comunidades? ¿Como podemos usar este opportunidad del radio?

Brainwave Music
Zach Layton
An introduction to brainwave music, this workshop will introduce, display and sonify brainwave data. Participants will be given an opportunity to make music with their brainwaves, learn about the different rhythms that correspond to various states of relaxation and explore concepts of mental telepathy through the interface between radio transmission and biofeedback.

Arts and Crafts: Making Signs and Banners for WGXC Parade
Kids track.

We Begin by Listening: Methods of Transformative Community Organizing
Diana J Nucera (Allied Media Projects)
Allied Media Projects (AMP) has been bringing people together to share models for how community media can be used for community transformation. Over the past 12 years we have learned form our network that the best strategies are rooted in a set of shared principles. The most import of these principles is: “We begin by listening.” In this workshop we will use popular education to break down the principles that guide the AMP network and share examples of what these principles look like in practice.

11:15 a.m.-1 p.m.

Studio Transmitter Links: How to Get the Audio From Here to There
Andy Gunn
The methods for sending audio from a radio studio to the transmitter site have expanded and changed over the years. As Plain Old Telephone Service fades in to history, what are our options for the future? What won’t break the bank? What can we do ourselves, and when do we have to pay for it?

Diversity and Power-Sharing at Community Radio Stations
Nan Rubin, Sharmeen Khan
Because community radio stations rely on a large and diverse cohort of volunteers, there is always a question of where the power rests over policy and programming decision-making. Often there are equal but conflicting interests jockeying for control, and entrenched positions which keep people away can be hard to alter. How can community radio stations address accessibility and diverse political interests that are empowering and fulfill the mandate for ‘alternative’ radio? This workshop will examine how different community radio stations approach diversity and anti-oppression through policy, practice and programming. Hear stories of workshops, programming decisions and other approaches, along with their outcomes -– both positive and negative -– in efforts to strengthen the responsiveness and access of various interest groups to a community voice.

Writing for Radio
Selina Musuta, Adi Gevins
Writing for radio’s special, not like writing for print, blog or TV. We’ll explore writing with sound, leading with the ear not the eye. We’ll discuss truthfulness vs. truthiness; balance, perspective, and voice. We’ll play with painting pictures, setting scenes, and presenting characters. We’ll also talk about the role & character of the reporter/narrator/host. Be ready for sharing: Discussion, Small Groups, and Exercises.

Experiencias de Radios Hispanas
Juan Basilio Sanchez
A traves de este taller los participantes podran exponer sus logros, sus obstaculos, el caracter participativo de los esfuerzos y los retos en un país, en el que la cantidad de medios de comunicacion, no se corresponden con la cantidad de hispanos recidentes.

Circuit Sniffing
Philip Stearns
Electronic devices silently emit gobs of electromagnetic energy, their signals leaking out into public space and permeating the world around us. In this workshop you’ll learn how to make “Circuit Sniffing” devices that let you literally listen to what is going on inside a circuit! Once we’ve put together our circuit sniffers, we’ll create an improvised musical performance using the electronic devices we have available to us in the workshop environment.

Young Producers Project
Jeremy Thal, GideonCrevoshay
In this workshop, young Hudsonites will develop a one-minute radio short, featuring music, poetry, and interviews. We’ll learn how to record, edit, and mix sounds using Ableton Live. This workshop is for youth only.

Magic Show
Kids track.

1-2 p.m.

LPFM Caucus
This will be an opportunity for Low Power FM stations to share experiences, challenges, success stories, jokes, stickers and more in an informal lunch caucus setting.

2-3 p.m.

PTFP Clinic
Nan Rubin
PTF-what? Interested in learning more about this federally funded program for public radio stations? PTFP expert Nan Rubin will be on hand to explain this funding opportunity and answer questions.

Insights Into Hispanics in the Hudson Valley
Mariel Fiori
Are you aware to what extent Hispanics influence life in our counties and what services and programs these Hispanics are being offered? Find out more on Sunday, September 26. Mariel Fiori, journalist and three time recipient of the Ippie award for best overall design from the New York Community Media Alliance, will be speaking both about her magazine, La Voz, as well as her insight into the Hispanic presence in the Hudson Valley.

Also a few short workshops will be announced at the last moment for this time period.

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Locations of facilities for WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising Sept. 24-26 in Hudson, New York.

BARNRAISING FACILITIES
All facilities in Hudson, NY.
St. Mary’s Academy, 301 Allen St.: Registration and workshops.
Cannonball Factory, 359-361 Columbia St.: Friday night and Sunday events.
WGXC Hudson studio, 704 Columbia St., 2nd Fl. Studio build and live webcast/media.
Youth Club, 18 South 3rd St.: Crash space.
Pocketbook Factory, North 6th St. and Washington St.: Camping.

If you use Twitter, please use #barnraising to refer to the Barnraising.

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David LaSpina shot this YouTube video of WGXC volunteer (and Ancram resident) Sara Kendall, talking about community radio. LaSpina will help program a radio show about photography for WGXC, and Kendall is working on development for the station.

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Left to right, Nadine Rumke, Nadea Archbold, William Archbold of Hover Foundation; and Kaya Weidman, Chad Weckler, Galen Joseph-Hunter of WGXC.

Today, the Alexander and Marjorie Hover Foundation presented WGXC with a gift of $25,000 at the station’s new studios at 704 Columbia St., in Hudson. This support completes WGXC’s fundraising efforts to match a grant of $71,486 from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration through their Public Telecommunications Facilities Program. These funds will allow WGXC to acquire the bulk of the equipment needed for the station to go on the air on 90.7-FM.

“This funding comes at an optimum moment,” said WGXC Executive Director, Galen Joseph-Hunter. “We are so grateful to the Hover Foundation and the 269 organizations and individuals who have become WGXC members, contributing towards the effort to bring creative and community radio to Greene and Columbia counties.”

WGXC Announces Matching Funds Towards On-Air Equipment Secured: A Gift from The Alexander and Marjorie Hover Foundation Closes WGXC’s Funding Gap.

Chad Weckler, artist and WGXC volunteer said, “Organizations working together to support the people and the voices of our shared community will make an immeasurable impact on our lives here in these two counties.”

Kaya Weidman, WGXC Volunteer Coordinator and Hudson Studio Manager said, “With the matching funds now secure, WGXC staff and volunteers will be able to turn their efforts to content, which is a welcomed opportunity in these final weeks leading up to the station’s FM signal launch.

On behalf of the foundation, Nadine Rumke, Executive Director, Nadea Archbold, Board Secretary, and William Archbold, Board Treasurer hand-delivered the gift this morning at WGXC’s Hudson Studio. They expressed enthusiasm for WGXC as an ambitious project that has already engaged diverse and expansive participation from the local community, and cited WGXC as a strong addition to the roster of other organizations supported by the foundation.

The Hover Foundation, based in Germantown, is a family foundation committed to supporting local groups whose work strives to enrich the community through educational, cultural, and humanitarian efforts.

WGXC Station “Barnraising” September 24 -26, 2010: Through a national competitive process, WGXC was selected by the national radio advocacy organization, Prometheus Radio Project, to collaborate with hundreds of participants for a three-day radio conference in Hudson, NY from September 24-26. The event will include hands-on workshops, presentations, and performances all in support of readying WGXC for a FM signal launch this fall on 90.7-FM.

WGXC: Hands-on Radio is a program of 501(c)3 nonprofit arts organization free103point9, and will operate out of studios in Hudson, Catskill, and Cairo.

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Sept. 25, 2010: 9 p.m. – 11:30 p.m.
Club Helsinki Hudson, 405 Columbia St., Hudson, NY 12534
518-828-4800

“Live Night Radio”
A Night of Music curated by Meshell Ndegeocello to Support WGXC.

featuring:
The Wreck of the Steamboat Swallow
Holden Caulfield: Chris Neumann and Meshell
Ignore Me Please: a soundscape dance band with Antony Katz and Meshell
Elana Belle Carol and The Checker Chance
Jake Plourde
Jeremy Yoakam and Eric Elterman
Meshell Ndegeocello featuring Otto Hauser, Jeremy Thal, and Gideon Crevoshay
A DJ and more to be confirmed.

In the midst of WGXC’s “Radio Barnraising,” a community media extravaganza involving three days of workshops, station building and performances, Meshell Ndegeocello will curate an evening of music at Club Helsinki as a benefit concert for Columbia and Greene counties’ very own brand new community radio station. The evening will be a one-time collaboration of an incredible collection of musicians and Meshell to play in celebration of the live launch of WGXC: Hands-on Radio.

Tickets are $18 in advance until 9 a.m. Sept. 25 (below, through Brown Paper Tickets), and $25 that night at the Club Helsinki door. WGXC Founding Members and attendees of the WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project can purchase $15 advance tickets. Email tom@wgxc.org for discount code.

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This September, Prometheus Radio Project and WGXC will hold Prometheus’s 12th community radio barnraising. Radio barnraisings are weekend-long radio and movement-building events. Individuals from the local community, participatory media advocates, and artists from around the country will converge in Hudson, NY to share ideas, experiences, skills and build infrastructure to get WGXC’s full-power community radio station on the air later this fall. The weekend Barnraising will include several special events:
INCIDENT REPORT Installation.
WGXC/WORD WGXC fundraiser with poets, spoken word artists, rappers, and others Sept. 24 at Cannonball Factory. (free admission)
MESHELL NDEGEOCELLO AND FRIENDS WGXC fundraiser Sept. 25 at Club Helskinki.
WGXC/PROMETHEUS CELEBRATION WGXC/Prometheus Radio Project Station Barnraising Celebration Sept. 26 at Cannonball Factory. WGXC will reveal initial program schedule at this event.

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The Columbia Paper’s Debora Gilbert pens a long feature about WGXC:

WGXC, a new community radio station with studios in both Columbia and Greene counties is poised to go on air this fall. With a 3,300 watt signal it will have the potential to reach some 78,000 people spread in this part of the Hudson River Valley, with its primary coverage stretching from Windham in Greene County to the Taconic Parkway down to northern Dutchess County and up to Kinderhook and Coxsackie. “It will be all about our community in the river valley,” said Hudson Talbot, an artist and author of numerous children’s books and director of the Catskill Community Center. The station is a project of the arts organization free103point9, will have studios in Hudson at 704 Columbia Street, in Cairo at the home of free103point9, which has been broadcasting on the web since last year, and behind a plate glass window at street level at the Catskill Community Center on Main Street. “We’re intent on balance and representation across the two counties, and covering both the rural and urban,” said Galen Joseph-Hunter, executive director of both WGXC and free103point9, in explanation of the need for three studios. Cairo resident Tom Roe, program director of free103point9 and WGXC, and the founder of both organizations, said “We’ve long advocated for the people’s access to their own airwaves.” Mr. Roe thinks of radio space as being similar to national park lands as a resource that is owned by the people. “There’s not any place around here that lets local people do more than a handful of radio shows. We try to practice what we preach.” “We envisioned a low power station for just Hudson; to get a full power community station, it’s an incredibly rare opportunity. The Federal Communications Commission discovered this frequency was not being used, and said let’s put them out there and see if there is interest,” said Mr. Roe of the opportunity to create the station in a crowded broadcast market. The project will soon get a boost of energy and expertise when the Prometheus Radio Project comes to Hudson to conduct a week long Amish style “barnraising” and fundraiser. It is expected to attract some 200 radio pros and technicians from across the country, who will descend on the WGXC’s Hudson studio to work with volunteers from the community to install equipment, and conduct free training workshops open to all on radio skills ranging from how to operate a sound board or microphone to how to conduct an interview. Remote broadcasting, streaming and podcasting, community news and collecting oral histories will also be addressed. The mission of the station is to build community by connecting a diverse group of local voices, and to give everyone in the community who wants them the skills to make radio programs. The organization’s website describes the project as “re-envisioning radio as an innovative platform for local participation. ‘Hands-on Radio’ captures the essence of this project. WGXC’s participatory environment will bring to life the idea that media is not something that is fed to us, but something we create with our own hands, hearts, and minds.”As part of its community building initiative, the station has invited people from both sides of the river to serve on its founding radio council, including Columbia County residents Max Goldfarb, the Hudson-based radio artist, Hosneara Kader, who works with Hudson Family Literacy, Christina Malisoff, a program assistant at the Hudson Opera House, Alan Skerrett, president of the Columbia County NAACP, and Andrew Turner, a Cairo resident and executive director for the Cornell Cooperative Extension of Columbia and Greene Counties. Mr. Turner said in a phone interview that he is impressed by the operation and sees a need for local radio. “It’s about giving a voice to people in the community; that’s different from public radio. Greene and Columbia counties are caught between the media markets. We need something that is more local; there is definitely something missing.” Members of the community have responded with enthusiasm, submitting over 90 proposals for radio programs ranging from jazz to the visual arts. Kaya Weidman, the station’s volunteer coordinator and Hudson station manager says she envisions panel discussions, interviews, and small bands performing right in the station’s second floor offices at 704 Columbia Street. The plan is for 24/7 programing, with a mix of live and taped material that includes some live broadcasts from locations throughout the two counties like the Hudson Opera House, Hudson Common Council meetings and other sites for lectures, concerts and shows. Technological advances will allow for broadcast via cell phone, obviating the need for expensive trucks with satellite dishes, said Ms. Wiedman. The station will provide recording equipment to trained volunteers who want to attend hearings and town meetings. “WGXC should help to shed more light on local government and give local cultural institutions the coverage they lack, and will be a complement to the media we already have, with a range of reporting that will reflect the diversity of the community,” said Ms. Joseph-Hunter “There will always be a way for members of the public to participate. Although we will have some syndicated shows including Susan Arbiter’s ‘Capitol Press Room,’ and Amy Goodman’s ‘Democracy Now,’ there’s more room for the local and we’ll be close on the dial,” said Ms. Joseph-Hunter. WAMC-Northeast Public Radio is at 90.3,FM, and WGXC could be seen as the competition for public support. But not so, said Alan Chartock, president, CEO and on-air personality of WAMC. “I have always said, and I certainly mean it, let a thousand flowers bloom. The more the better. This will certainly serve a local purpose, and we think that’s great.” He said he would invite WGXC on the air at WAMC if they ask. Nor is Cruisin 93.5′s Bill Williams concerned. “Anyone who is going to listen to them is not listing to us at the moment,” he said. “I listen to WAMC all the time, but we’re always looking for something more pertinent to us,” said Mr. Talbot. The station’s program lineup will be announced at the Saturday night of the barnraising weekend at Club Helsinki, where Meshell Ndegeocello and friends will present a benefit concert. A welcoming party featuring spoken word performance, rap, poets and music on Friday and a Sunday event in which the station may celebrate going live will take place at the Cannonball Factory. The barnraising represents the 12th such event conducted by the non-profit Prometheus Radio Project, which formed in 1998 to help communities take advantage of new at that time lo-power 100 watt offerings by the Federal Communications Commission. The Hudson event marks the first time that Prometheus has sponsored a barnraising for a full-power 3,300 watt station. Fundraising is key to the success of the operation and probably the hardest part of the start-up. The higher frequency station demands more expensive equipment. The group received a $71,486 matching grant from the United States Department of Commerce to cover infrastructure, including FM signal equipment, studio consoles, and the tower equipment shed, backup generator, transmission equipment and antenna; $25,000 remains to be raised for the matching grant, and another $15,000 will be needed for equipment. The antenna has been ordered from a company in Italy but the rest of the equipment will be purchased locally. The station has started to sign up businesses to underwrite segments of programming.

Read the entire story in The Columbia Paper.

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Catamount People's Museum opening, with creator Matt Bua.

WGXC was at the opening of artist Matt Bua‘s Catamount People’s Museum at 21 West Bridge St. in Catskill today. The museum is a handmade structure in the form of a lounging bobcat using discarded tree branches and cut-offs from local mills. WGXC had a rain-shortened live webcast today with performances by Bradford Reed and his Amazing Pencilina and Carmen Borgia. From Bua, “The interior of this over-sized Lynx Rufus houses a collection of materials and displays celebrating the people, stories and history of the Catskill Mountains. Content for displays are collected from both historical organizations and the surrounding community. The museum has a unique focus of seamlessly blending the stories, visions and personal collections of residents with the voices of historians. The folk legends, urban myths and favorite, almost forgotten tide bits on display make this new public space a place to soak in what this area is really all about.”

Carmen Borgia

Click here to listen to the first part of Carmen Borgia’s performance, or paste the following url into your computer’s media player:

http://archive.free103point9.org/2010/09/CarmenBorgiapart1_Catamount_WGXC_090410.mp3

Click here to listen to the second part of Carmen Borgia’s performance, or paste the following url into your computer’s media player:

http://archive.free103point9.org/2010/09/CarmenBorgiapart2_Catamount_WGXC_090410.mp3

Click here to listen to Bradford Reed and His Amazing Pencilina’s performance, or paste the following url into your computer’s media player:

http://archive.free103point9.org/2010/09/BradfordReedAmazingPencilina_Catamount_WGXC_090410.mp3

Bradford Reed and His Amazing Pencilina

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Diners at Mexican Radio on the evening of Sept. 9 will help bring community radio to Greene and Columbia counties, as a portion of the proceeds from all meals will go to WGXC.

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Rangda at Cannonball Factory for WGXC Aug. 31, 2010.

Last night Rangda (underground legends Richard Bishop of Sun City Girls; Chris Corsano who has played with Bjork and Thurston Moore; and Ben Chasny of Six Organs of Admittance), Major Stars, and Bunnybrains, all performed a fundraiser for WGXC at Cannonball Factory.

Listen to Rangda’s set here, or paste the following url into your computer’s media player: http://archive.free103point9.org/2010/08/Rangda_Cannonball_WGXC_083110.mp3

Listen to Major Stars’ set here, or paste the following url into your computer’s media player: http://archive.free103point9.org/2010/08/MajorStars_Cannonball_WGXC_083110.mp3

Bunnybrains' Dan Seward curated the evening.

Listen to Bunnybrains set here, or paste the following url into your computer’s media player: http://archive.free103point9.org/2010/08/Bunnybrains_Cannonball_WGXC_083110.mp3

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Join the legendary Meshell Ndegeocello and her collaborators to celebrate the live launch of WGXC 90.7 FM. In the midst of WGXC’s “Radio Barnraising,” a community media extravaganza involving three days of workshops, station building and performances, Ndegeocello will grace the stage of Club Helsinki to play a benefit concert for Columbia and Greene counties very own brand new community radio station. Joining her will be a variety of musicians to play this one very special show.

BUY TICKETS BY CLICKING HERE

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WGXC Online Radio had a live webstream Aug. 22, 2010 from the Cannonball Factory for a WGXC fundraiser with Vetiver, DJ Lunar Moss, Arp, and Nina Violet.

AUDIO RECORDINGS
Arp opening set mp3 recording is here or paste the following url into your computer’s media player:

http://archive.free103point9.org/2010/08/Arp_Cannonball_WGXC_082210.mp3

Nina Violet’s set recording is here or paste the following url into your computer’s media player:

http://archive.free103point9.org/2010/08/NinaViolet_Cannonball_WGXC_082210.mp3

VetiverA recording of Vetiver’s performance, and the closing DJ set from DJ Lunar Moss is here or paste the following url into your computer’s media player:

http://archive.free103point9.org/2010/08/VetiverDJLunarMoss_Cannonball_WGXC_082210.mp3

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Tanya Holonko and Diane Hencke speak about natural pet foods at Greene County Eco Fair at Agroforestry Center.

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Hal Zucker speaks next about sustainable lifestyles at Greene County Eco-Fair at Agroforestry Center in Acra.

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Mark Bomba from Alteris Renewables speaks about solar power at Greene County Eco-Fair at Agroforestry Center in Acra, NY.

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Joe Laquatra from Cornell University is beamed in with a presentation about Home Energy Efficiency at Greene County Eco-Fair at the Agroforesty Center in Acra. Watch video above or listen to audio at www.wgxc.org or:

http://comm.free103point9.org:8000/cairo.mp3.m3u

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Watch video above of Sarah Charlop-Powers from NYSERDA speaking about making your home energy efficient at Greene County Eco-Fair in Acra. (Note: Twitcam text lists incorrect information about content of this video.)

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Wide variety of talent tonight at the Cairo Open Mic, the monthly event sponsored by the Cairo Library and WGXC. This week, part-time Cornwallville resident Esther Cohen was giving a writing workshop, and brought several members of her class to read. Michelle Curtis began the evening, followed by Nancy Henry, Dean Lavin, Cohen herself, and Tony Fallon. Then the band American Monarchy made their debut, featuring Mike Mottl on vocals, David Auger on guitar, Nick Anader on bass, Matt Schlosser on drums, and Alex Jacobs on rhythm guitar. Then Harry Gottlieb played classical guitar, and Claude Haton, Steve Anader, and Matt Schlosser jamming on some classic rock songs. Click here to listen to an mp3 recording, or paste the following url into your computer’s media player:

http://archive.free103point9.org/2010/08/CairoOpenMic_WGXC_082010.mp3

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Aug. 23, 2010: 6 p.m. – Aug. 30, 2010: 8 p.m
at Cairo Library at the Cairo Town Hall, 512 Main St., Cairo, NY
518-622-9864

Teens (13 – 19) interested in making radio are invited for this two-part, free, workshop at the Cairo Public Library, 512 Main Street, Cairo, NY. The workshops will take place Mondays, August 23 and 30 from 6-8 p.m. Bring out your creative mind, find your hidden voice, make radio for your community! For more information, contact emily [at] wgxc.org or phone (518) 291-WGXC.

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Poster by Jess Puglisi.


Vetiver and DJ Lunar Moss perform at a WGXC fundraiser at Cannonball Factory in Hudson Aug. 22.

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