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Follow Up on the
News
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clarifying
some misunderstandings about the Large Parcel Law
Each August the Onteora School Board must either present a
resolution to ignore the LPL, or vote yes or no to reinstituting
the LPL. And each November, the Ulster County Legislature
must do the same. The majority of the districts faced with
the LPL resolve to ignore it. Olive Matters questions why
the Onteora School Board and the UC Legislation wouldn’t
choose to do the same.
Statement: If the Onteora School Board and the UC Legislature
vote on a resolution not to reinstitute the Large Parcel Law,
it will then go away.
False. A resolution is not a law. In order for the LPL to
go away, Albany legislators must amend the LPL to exclude
reservoirs. The town of Olive’s requests to our representatives
for an amendment has fallen on deaf ears.
Statement:The LPL was written to equalize taxes between towns.
False. The LPL was written to prevent “wild swings”
in taxes within a school district or county when a large parcel’s,
( i.e., a utility or manufacturing company’s) value
fluctuates year to year. By factoring out the utility or manufacturing
company’s “wild swings,” it keeps the district
and county taxes stable.
The Ashokan Reservoir never had “wild swings”
in its value. But enacting, or not enacting the LPL now creates
the “wild swings” yearly in Olive’s taxes.
Exactly opposite of what the law was intended to do.
Onteora
Surprise
Meanwhile, the board also decided to re-open their
search for a new superintendent following a growing negative
response to its two finalists, recently presented at public
meetings in late June.
The vote to appoint D’Orazio occured after trustee
Rita Vanacore nominated Patterson as president for a second
term but he declined the spot. Patterson said, “Rita
I would like to thank you for your confidence in my leadership,
but after being contacted by a couple board members expressing
their lack of confidence in me and that my leadership would
not be in the best interest in the district, I have to decline
your nomination.”
O’Connor and Mary Jane Bernholz supported Patterson
as president in 2005, but turned their vote for board president
to D’Orazio this time, along with newly re-elected
board member Herb Rosenfeld and newly elected trustee Maxanne
Resnick of Shandaken, who was sworn in at the Tuesday night
meeting.
Patterson and Vanacore voted against D’Orazio for
president.
Vanacore also lost her seat as board Vice President to the
board to fellow Olive resident Bernholz, with Patterson
the single vote against her. Resnick replaced Lev Flournoy
who chose not to seek a second term as board member. Trustee
Herb Rosenfeld was also sworn in for a second term.
The school board then voted unanimously to rescind the special
education staff cuts that were made to assure a low tax
levy for the voters during budget hearings… against
much opposition, and resulting in a previous 4-3 split of
board votes. The audience, nearly full of special education
employees and their supporters, met the decision with loud
applause.
Positions being restored so far are a full time teacher
of the deaf, a part time to full time social worker, and
two part time to full time and one full time special education
instructors.
Business administrator Victoria McLaren said, “I will
be bringing a resolution to the board in August to take
care of this because we will have to increase the budget
to accommodate these…”
She added that once the re-hiring of employees is completed
they would be using the two percent appropriated fund balance.
“That is what the fund balance is meant to be used
for, these types of situations where we had planned on a
certain level of staffing and due to unanticipated levels
of staffing and due to unanticipated IEP needs-where we
are required to service students.”
Interim Superintendent Jack Jordan, who was not employed
in the district during the budget hearings, said, “We
have revised data…and this is based on the annual
reviews and recommendation to the committee on special ed
and in order to meet the needs of our students, this is
our recommendation.”
O’Connor noted, “It was painstaking for everybody
and the people that were involved, the people that had to
be laid off, the people that spoke and I am not against
this at all, if this is what we need to do, we need to bring
some of the positions back, but to me there seems to be
a way that we should have known this earlier. I guess I
am asking if this could have been prevented.”
Other school board members voiced similar concerns. O’Connor
requested to see the data that caused the change and asked
if Independent Education Plans (IEP) could be completed
earlier. Patterson requested to look into a policy where
the annual reviews could be done earlier to budget hearings,
if complied with the law.
addressed Patterson, “Dave, if we really want to be
easy on the parents and the children and the employees,
what we do is keep increasing the budget. When you cut positions,
which is the way you reduce the budget, you are going to
run into this kind of a thing,” said Director of Pupil
Personnel Barbara Boyce. “Frankly, this year is not
the first year we did a major cut in special ed, it was
actually the second year but last year we did not cut things
that were directly tied to staff, so it makes a difference.”
Boyce said she encourages the staff to try to get their
referrals for special education before the budget, but law
does not allow a set time frame. Although staff can make
projected recommendations on special education, referrals
are usually done later in the year because the programming
is recommended for the following school year.
The decision to restart the Superintendent Search was announced
after the meeting, and an Executive Session on the subject,
in a press relkease from D’Orazio.
“ The Board of Education wishes to announce that the
negotiations with the finalists for the Superintendent’s
position did not ultimately prove fruitful and that, therefore,
we are continuing our search for our Superintendent and
that Interim Superintendent Jordan will remain in place
and fulfill all of the duties of the Superintendency pursuant
to Board policy,” read the release.
The board was considering Granville schools Superintendent
Daniel Teplesky and Cherry Valley-Springfield Superintendent
Nicholas Savin. Onteora has been without a permanent superintendent
since February, when Justine Winters stepped down because
of health problems. Winters, who was hired in 2004, died
in May after a battle with cancer. Peter J. Ferrara, a former
Ellenville superintendent, was hired as an interim successor
to Winters but resigned a short time later after the Onteora
board learned of civil rights violations in the Ellenville
district during Ferrara's time at the helm. Jordan, a former
Sullivan County superintendent and current resident of the
Onteora district who ran unsuccessfully for a school board
seat in 2005, was given the interim post after Ferrara left.
In what was meant to be business as usual, with the school
board voting on the creation of various committees, a heated
exchange arose with D’Orazio dissolving all committees…
at least temporarily.
The debate started with several board members asking for
changes in the wording of committee responsibilities, at
which point D’Orazio, in his renewed position as board
president, noted how angry the board’s management
of committees had made him over the previous year, stating
that he is against “micro-managing.”
Vanacore requested that the board create a restriction where
only a school employee can only be head of the technology
committee. Patterson questioned the responsibility of the
Future of the District Commission and asked it be removed
from the agenda. Vanacore questioned the facilities committee
responsibilities regarding the capital projects and asked
to limit their input.
D’Orazio becoming angry and said, “From now
on, the board is going to tackle these issues in open forum.”
Bernholz requested that all discussion of committees be
removed from the agenda and discussed at a future meeting.
“It is not the board of educations job to micro-manage
the life of the committees said D’Orazio. “The
committees know what they are dong; you just tell them to
go out there and do something, the way they set themselves
up and they report back to the board. I do not think it
is our job to lay out specifically what they do or what
they are. I just don’t want to get involved with that!”
The board voted five-to-two, to remove the committee’s
from the consent agenda.
D’Orazio followed by apologizing for his outburst,
blaming it on his Italian heritage, his passionate nature,
and the recent winning of the World Cup by his heritage
nation’s team.
Later during public be heard, Communications Committee president
Kathy Hochman, a former trustee, suggested the board keep
the committees broadly defined.
Woodstock resident and parent Gordon Wemp added that he
would like to see the school board tap into the education
channels available on public access television. According
to him, all towns in the school district must have Time
Warner contracts in place and Shandaken has yet to complete
their part. He offered to help set up the establishment
of the link.
Athletic director Mike Kocher addressed the school board
on community “misconceptions,” regarding the
hiring of a school varsity football coach. “At the
beginning of the year, it was determined by this district
that Onteora suspend it’s varsity football program
for the near future thus fielding only a junior varsity
and a modified team for the 2006-2007 school year,”
said Kocher, “This decision was based on the lack
of participation by upper classmen of this school and the
opportunity to rebuild the once flourishing program.”
He noted that the next steps were to, “increase participation
and find a qualified coach to achieve this goal.”
On the agenda he pointed out the recommendation of Christopher
Kasprzyk as Junior Varsity head coach.
The school board has set an additional meeting on August
10 for the sole purpose of a community-be-heard session
regarding the Large Parcel legislation. The school board
must vote in favor or not in favor of enactng the controversial
bill no later than August 22. The meeting will take place
at 7pm at the Middle/High School.
Taking
On The Mainstream
Indeed,
lively conversations in the hallways outside the
auditorium presaged the prevailing view of the event’s
speakers that today’s mainstream media has
drifted far from the role envisioned for the press
in a free democracy when the nation’s Constitution
was framed 230 years before this holiday weekend.
The theme of the evening, Media Responsibility In
Time of War, as presented by U.S. Congressman Maurice
Hinchey and media experts Danny Schechter, Jeff
Cohen and Amy Goodman, brought most of the cheering
throng to their feet several times during the discussions.
Olive’s gifted singer-songwriter Amy Fradon
drew thunderous applause herself by opening the
proceedings with a stirring rendition of her own
composition, "Here’s My Flag," a
song highlighting freedoms represented by a banner
for "right and left and rich and poor."
Fradon commented that she was moved to write the
song after experiencing censoring cautions from
club owners and concert organizers not to refer
to the war in Iraq on stage.
The evening’s guest emcee, Alan Chartock,
president and CEO of WAMC radio and publisher of
the <i>Legislative Gazette</I>, said
in his opening remarks that it was fitting that
it was the Fourth of July weekend since "So
much of this centers on the very essence of the
government brilliantly crafted by out nation’s
founders. They saw, clearly, that an informed populace
would be able to govern itself in an enlightened
way while ignorance opens the door to tyranny."
Chartock first introduced Danny Schechter (the "news
dissector"), a former Emmy Award-winning producer
of ABC’s "20/20" news digest, author
of <i>The More You Watch, the Less You Know</I>,
founder of Mediachannel.org- the largest online
network devoted to media interests- and producer
of <i>In Debt We Trust</I>, a recently
released documentary from the Globalvision independent
film company he co-founded.
The announcement bringing Amy Goodman on stage drew
a lengthy standing ovation, much to the chagrin
of Chartock, who has long resisted carrying Goodman’s
national (and now international) radio program <I>
Democracy Now</I> on his station. Goodman
is co-author of the best-seller <i>Exception
To the Rulers: Exposing Oily Politicians, War Profiteers
and the Media That Love Them.</I>
Also warmly welcomed was founder of the media watchdog
group Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting (F.A.I.R),
Jeff Cohen, familiar to tv audiences as the former
co-host on CNN’s <i>Crossfire</I>
and as a panelist on Fox News’ <i>Newswatch</I>
program. Author of the forthcoming <i>Cable
News Confidential: My Misadventures In Corporate
Media</I>, Cohen was also a prominent pundit
on MSNBC prior to the Iraqi invasion.
The introduction of Rep. Hinchey sparked a standing
ovation to rival Goodman’s and he earned further
cheers with his remark that it was "encouraging
to know that there are so many people concerned
about this issue- which, frankly, I think is the
most important issue that we confront in our society.
Maybe that’s always been the case because
it’s part of the First Amendment to the Constitution,
so it must have been seen as critical back in the
18th Century...but it’s even more critical
now because we have a conspiratorial government
working to suppress information...."
Hinchey, who founded the FAM (Future of American
Media) Caucus in the House of Representatives, was
in the forefront of the fight against the FCC’s
(Federal Communications Commission) efforts to "reform"
media ownership rules in 2003 and had his media
"p’s and q’s" honed to a point.
That was apt since each speaker was afforded only
an initial ten minutes to make their essential points.
"The broadcast spectrum is owned not by any
individual nor by any corporation but by the American
people," Hinchey said, drawing reference to
the original regulations governing spectrum use
in the 1920's and 1930's and the "Fairness
Doctrine" that was a key component of the rules
until eliminated under the Reagan administration.
Noting that the doctrine was applied partially in
response to the way the new medium was being employed
by fascist regimes in Europe, he added that "in
those days, in order to be licensed to broadcast
on the radio, you agreed that if you have a political
opinion to express, you may do so but, if someone
else has a different political opinion, they should
be given the right to express that as well."
Hinchey said that the Fairness Doctrine was scrapped
by the design of people advancing a "particular
philosophy that did not want that equality to exist."
It was an early "overt example" of what
we call the neo-conservatives, or neo-cons, "trying
to control information that people have access to,"
he added.
There are only two ways to rule- by consent and
by fear, Hinchey declared, blaming an administration
whose fabrications are accelerating and a "rubber-stamp"
Congress for creating and advancing a "culture
of fear" in the country and abroad. He spoke
rapidly of pre-war speeches by Bush Administration
figures, an intimidated media, legal actions against
media for writing about illegal NSA domestic spying
programs, monitoring of banking records and internet
activities, disinformation and designed media leaks
to push an aggressive agenda, links between neocons
of the Reagan and Bush eras and, of course, the
besieged Bill of Rights.
"This is supposed to be a nation of law based
upon the fundamental founding principles in the
Constitution," Hinchey summed up. "We
all need to stand up against this administration
and the things that it is doing because those things
are illegal- because they impinge upon the rights
and freedoms and privileges and opportunities of
all Americans and they are doing it in a programmatic,
planned way. None of this is serendipitous or accidental.
It is all intentional and it has a clear, planned-out
objective to maintain and solidify political power
against the basic principles of our country. We
are facing, today, one of the most critical moments
in our nation’s history and we need to win
this battle against these repressive, despotic people
who want to control this country on the basis of
fear."
Jeff Cohen opened his remarks by noting how good
it felt to be in a "reality-based community"
as opposed, he implied, to the world of network
news.
"There are half a dozen media conglomerates
sitting on the windpipe of the 1st Amendment and
I’ve taken a paycheck from three of them,"
Cohen confessed impishly before speaking of his
experiences as a pundit with the Phil Donahue prime
time show on MSNBC before it was terminated 3 weeks
before the invasion of Iraq by an owner (General
Electric) poised to "profit handsomely"
from the war.
Cohen said that in the "run-up to the war"
he witnessed how corporate media abides "rule
by the worse- a system in which those with the least
principle rise to the top and those who challenged
evidence that Iraq was a threat were spat out of
the corporate media system.
"Those who echoed the official deceptions have
largely seen their careers flourish," he continued.
"There’s not a single tv executive that
I’m aware of- or an anchor or a pundit or
a correspondent or a so-called expert that lost
their job over getting the huge story of Iraq so
totally wrong, as almost every one of them did."
Cohen sketched a comparison between his own experience
of not being able to "discuss even the weather
without being balanced by at least one fire-breathing
right-winger" and the treatment of "military
advisors and so-called weapons experts who never
required any balance whatsoever" because "the
rule was ‘They’re independent.’
‘They’re objective.’ The head
of CNN even boasted that he went to the Pentagon
to get approval of his military analysts for on
and off the air advice and, yet, virtually everything
these weapons experts said, without balance throughout
the media, turned out to be wrong."
While itemizing the post-invasion excuses offered
by the experts, typified by "I certainly thought
the administration was telling the truth,"
Cohen commented that the tv audience had no way
of knowing that the retired general, used then and
now by MSNBC as chief military advisor, was on the
payroll of a military contractor making millions
for his work on a tank model deployed in the invasion.
Any time the Donahue show wanted to book a guest
with an anti-war perspective in the months prior
to the war, Cohen noted, MSNBC insisted that 2 pro-war
guests had to be included and that when film director
Michael Moore was suggested as a guest, management
said he had to be "balanced by THREE right-wingers!"
Cohen quipped that the show’s producers knew
better than to mention a guest like social commentator
Noam Chomsky simply because the studio wasn’t
large enough to accommodate the opposition he would
require.
Toward the close of his statements, Cohen quoted
an internal MSNBC memo mentioning the need to dispense
with dissenting views and head into full-time "flag
waving" in support of the invasion as a reason
for ditching the show. He said that it was his observation
that when journalists were too busy "waving
the flag," they don’t do their job to
help stabilize the checks and balances of a democratic
government.
"They don’t ask the tough questions before
our young men and women are sent overseas to kill
and be killed," he said to loud applause.
Cohen closed his segment with a Good News observation
that "In the last few years, millions of people
have aggressively sought out alternatives to corporate
media. That’s why independent media and blogs
and community radio, Democracy Now, Common Dreams.org
are booming. "Media activism is going through
the roof," he said, urging audience attention
to savetheinternet.com and the closely looming threat
to that urgently vital resource of public information.
"Don’t take the media lying down,"
he said.
***
Although there was a sprinkling of familiar faces
from Olive in the crowd, no one in the town has
yet to take advantage of provisions in the local
cable contract to found an Olive public access tv
station- a "compensatory" option provided
by the 1996 Telecommunications Act (legislation
which has led to the concentration of the majority
of U.S. media into the hands of five major corporations
and which was widely denounced at this gathering
by speakers and attendees alike). Public access
is also an option the Telecom giants are now working
hard to eliminate. Without a local access station,
media in Olive (excepting this newspaper, of course)
is largely confined to the informational feed provided
by national and regional sources; a news stream
with a paucity of independent voices, at least in
the view of these media experts.
The next two speakers, taking an even tougher stance
against a news and entertainment system "totally
dominated by corporate interests," questioned
rights of access and non-corporate presence in the
kinds of information massively disseminated in the
mainstream press and on the "public" airwaves.
Both Schechter and Goodman stressed the crucial
role of media outlets in shaping public opinion
and effecting the kind of world in which we live.
Danny Schechter, who shares some of Michael Moore’s
rough-hewn and rounded persona, prompted a wave
of laughter by observing the "funny thing"
that happened to neo-cons who studied the Soviet
Union during the Cold War- namely that they decided
they wanted to <i>be</I> like the Soviet
Union- and have, in the past few years, been introducing
Soviet-style laws and conditions. He charged that
media "sold" us the Iraqi war, saying
that out of some 800 experts presented in its prologue,
only six questioned it at all. He recalled that
at the international tribunal at Nuremberg following
the Second World War it was ruled that war of aggression
was an even worse war crime than the holocaust.
The key role of the dominant Nazi propaganda system
of the era, he said, was found at Nuremberg to be
an integral part of the criminal activity leading
to war.
"A dominating propaganda system (in place of
a socially responsible media) is not simply something
to denounce but should be regarded as a criminal
enterprise," Schechter said, citing more recent
examples in history, such as genocides in Rhwanda
and elsewhere, where the role of media in a war
helped lead to massive fatalities. He urged that
such media manipulations be viewed "not merely
as a bunch of mistakes but in terms of a crime against
the American people, a crime against the world and
a crime against truth."
Amy Goodman, whose <i>Democracy Now!</I>
program was founded in the same year as the Telecommunications
Act and grew from a few Pacifica listener-sponsored
stations to an independent entity (still affiliated
with Pacifica) heard and seen on over 450 radio
and tv stations in the U.S., Canada, Europe and
Australia. She said its popularity springs from
its attention to the voices of the powerless and
marginalized many she called "the silenced
majority."
Sticking to the topic of media’s role in the
Iraqi War, Goodman cited a study of the four major
networks (CBS, NBC, ABC and PBS) by Cohen’s
FAIR organization which indicated that of 393 war-related
interviews televised during the period of the study
only three featured leaders espousing anti-war views.
"That is no longer ‘mainstream media’,"
Goodman declared to a burst of applause, "That
is an ‘extreme media’ beating the drums
for war!
"Media are the most powerful institutions on
earth and the pentagon has deployed the media. We
have to take it back," she continued. "The
public airwaves are a national treasure with the
responsibility to bring out a full diversity of
opinion and if they don’t, they should have
their licenses revoked!"
Cutting into a level of sustained applause, Goodman
spoke of the stark differences between the reportage
of "embedded" journalists covering recent
invasions and the spontaneity exhibited during a
week of unindoctrinated reporters in New Orleans
in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Despite advisements
not to show bodies in the devastation, news reporters
in the waters with victims sometimes found such
gruesome floating displays unavoidable, she said,
adding that the unsanitized views of the tragedy
enraged many against the government’s handling
of the situation.
"If, for just one week, we saw those images
in Iraq, unembedded- those babies dead on the ground,
the women with their legs blown off because they
stepped on a cluster bomb in the wreckage or the
old men or the dead and dying U.S. soldiers- if
we saw those images, I really do think that Americans
are compassionate people and they would say ‘no-
war is not an answer to conflict in the 21st Century."
Calling a corporate-based, government-embedded substitute
for journalism a "conveyer belt for lies,"
Goodman said she saw the media as "a huge kitchen
table that stretches across this country, that we
all sit around to debate and discuss the most important
issues of the day- issues of life and death, war
and peace. Anything less than that is a disservice
to the service men and women of this country."
..................................
The Q&A session which followed produced a number
of highlights that included Jeff Cohen’s enthusiastic
remarks about the event’s turnout.
"The alternates to corporate media are being
built in this room," Cohen bubbled. "I’ve
never seen anything like it and I’ve been
in (media) for decades. We’ve got to bring
more <i>Democracy Now!</I> to this region,"
he continued to further applause and to Alan Chartock’s
chagrin. A little later, when Chartock was reading
Cohen a question about how independent media could
be promoted in the area, a loud voice from the audience
cried out "By putting <i>Democracy Now!</I>
on WAMC!", prompting loud cheers and an admonishment
to the audience to not embarrass their emcee which
issued from conference organizer Andi Novick, who
has, herself, lobbied WAMC to do so.
To Chartock’s credit, it should be observed
that his station not infrequently affords a platform
to critics of the current administration which ranges
from dissenting weapons expert Scott Ritter to David
Ray Griffin, author of <i>The 9/11 Commission
Report Omissions and Distortions</I> and <i>The
New Pearl Harbor: Disturbing Questions About the
Bush Administration and 9/11</I>. But, since
most of the station’s funding comes from corporate
underwriting despite their impressive listener fund
drives, a glaring clash exists between his station
and the insistently non-corporate Pacifica franchise.
The obvious problem in this standoff presents a
microcosm of the national media debate- WAMC dominates
the dial for public radio in the region, covering
parts of seven states, broadcasting from ten separate
locations which could otherwise provide an opening
for a public station that <i>would</I>
carry a program like Goodman’s.
As for the rest of the radio dial, of the 40 commercial
stations in this listening area at least 24 of them
are owned by San Antonio-based Clear Channel Communications
(CCC operates at least 1,225 radio stations in the
U.S. and, with international partners, hundreds
more in Mexico, Australia, New Zealand and Europe)
or Atlanta-based Cumulus Media Partners (343 U.S.
stations), both corporations have close ties to
the current administration and have staged pro-war
rallies throughout the country and banned artists
from their airwaves for expressing sentiments which
divert from that focus; a censorship effectively
blocking the airwaves from the expression of dissenting
political opinion.
During the build-up to the Iraqi invasion, for instance,
CCC, which is the home of syndicated shows by Rush
Limbaugh, Dr. Laura Schlessinger and other stars
of the political right, distributed a blacklist
to its chain of stations, banning songs like the
Youngbloods’ 1960's classic "Get Together,"
which "seditiously"urges people to "smile
on your brother...try to love one another"
and 157 other tunes they frowned upon. Cumulus has
staged CD-smashing events that featured the public
destruction of albums by the Dixie Chicks- a country
group that expressed disapproval of the President
from the concert stage. (Clear Channel’s television
stations have also refused to accept advertizing
with an anti-war message).
When it is noted without precision that "at
least 24" stations out of 40 in this listening
area are owned by CCC or Cumulus it is because companies
like Concord Media Group, which are listed as "independent"
in ownership inventories such as one compiled by
the nonpartisan, non-profit Center for Public Integrity
are, upon closer inspection, run by Clear Channel.
Also, according to <i>In These Times</I>
magazine, evidence was submitted to the (conglomerate-friendly)
FCC which indicates CCC "illegally ‘parks’
or ‘warehouses’ radio stations it’s
not allowed to own, by selling them to front, or
shell, companies... These front companies would
allow Clear Channel an easy way to buy back the
stations if the FCC were to further reduce ownership
limits." Clear Channel CEO, Mark Mays, has
indeed been lobbying Congress to increase by 50%
the amount of stations one corporation can own in
major market areas.
Clear Channel’s industry-leading tour management
division has been fighting lawsuits from groups
which represent recording artists who claim CCC
coerces low artist fees for concerts by threating
not to play their work if they don’t meet
the company’s terms. Musical playlists are
centrally composed for distribution to stations
across the country with local call letters spliced
in to give the appearance that the station’s
region has local representation.
While their executives scorn charges of illegal
monopoly practices, Clear Channel has also been
under legal fire for anti-trust violations and is
being eyed in ongoing payola investigations (including
Eliot Spitzer’s) and has recently been ordered
to pay a $90 million for anti-competitive practices
(less than the "golden parachute’ arranged
for CCC-founder and Chairman Lowry Mays and his
two sons. Also in the Mays family is Lowry’s
son-in-law Michael McCaul, who was elected to Congress
in Texas’s 10th District with no Democratic
opposition after Tom Delay’s 2003 redistricting
in the state. McCaul is up for re-election this
year but 80% of his district’s voters will
be using electronic machines manufactured by a company
in which Clear Channel’s vice-president, Thomas
Hicks, is a heavy investor.) Meanwhile, CCC continues
to expand, with its outdoor billboard division announcing
its purchase of Interspace this month, which advances
its presence in North America, the Caribbean, Latin
America and the Pacific Rim at the same time it
is establishing a strategic alliance with GIIR Inc.,
Korea’s second largest advertizing firm. Other
divisions are busy gobbling up newspaper and magazine
distributors in the U.S.
What’s left for local media consumers hoping
for untilted news coverage is a patchwork of smaller
stations largely dependent on mainstream network
news feeds and the overriding presence of Chartock’s
WAMC, which carries the NPR news packages that distress
many of the attendees of the NCRM event. Charges
that the daily massage of programs like "Morning
Edition" and "All Things Considered"
is a slickly manipulated "PsyOps" (psychological
operations) campaign was fodder for discussion in
the hallways of the auditorium if not upon its stage.
Such accusations link directly to NPR president
Kevin Klose, former Moscow bureau chief for the
<i>Washington Post</I> in the Reagan
era before becoming head of U.S. government overseas
propaganda organs Radio Liberty, Radio Free Europe
and Radio Free Asia as Director of International
Broadcasting for the CIA-linked U.S. Information
Agency. Stir in the underlings and associates Klose
brought to NPR, which reaches 22 million listeners
a week, to help "manage" the news and
add the Public Broadcasting Corporation’s
head, Robert Coonrod, who oversaw Voice of America
operations and Radio Marti, which targets Cuba with
U.S. programming (as well as its tv division) and
you begin to see why some listeners, who call Klose
NPR’s "propaganda czar," are upset
with the network’s handling of news.
The Pentagon’s announcement at the outset
of the current conflict in Iraq, that it would "embed"
reporters and manage the flow of information (or
disinformation) during the engagement, didn’t
specifically refer to intelligence assets in the
media but some observers have noted the implications.
Robert Parry, a former reporter for the Associated
Press, <i>Newsweek</I> and PBS’s
<i>Frontline</I> series, devoted a book
(<i>Fooling America: How Washington Insiders
Twist the Truth and Manufacture Conventional Wisdom
[1992]) to the "Vietnam Syndrome"- which
was a perceived reluctance on the part of the American
people to initiate wars since the misadventures
of Vietnam. The Pentagon and war industry hawks
of that era, including current administration figures
like Richard Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, blamed
the syndrome on the American media and, according
to Parry’s research, vowed to co-opt that
element of "media damage" during any further
military ventures. Parry currently operates a media
watch website at Consortiumnews.com
Klose has also been active in the suppression of
licenses for low power radio (10 to 1000 watts)
stations (operating as ‘Class D’ non-commercial
FM stations) which were ironically outlawed by the
FCC in the late 1960s shortly before National Public
Radio was cemented as a national entity that has
expanded its corporate sponsorship stealthfully
ever since. Coonrod, as president and CEO of the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting, was also instrumental
in the takeover of the Pacifica Foundation’s
executive board in 2001, months before Goodman struck
a deal to turn her program into a separate (but
linked) nonprofit organization.
A deeper view of media mergers and manipulations
in recent years can only widen the concern for a
democratic media (small ‘d’). CCC’s
vice chairman, Tom Hicks, made the current president
a multimillionaire by purchasing the struggling
Texas Rangers baseball franchise from him and turned
over control of funds for the University of Texas
Investment Management Company (which he founded
before putting Lowry Mays on the board of directors)
to Bush-linked companies like the Carlyle Group.
Colin Powell, whose son was appointed head of the
FCC, was on the corporate board of America Online,
which merged with CNN owner Time-Warner. Carla Hills,
a AOL/Time-Warner board member, was also on the
board of Chevron Oil (along with Condoleeza Rice)
and had been trade representative for the current
president’s father, who was also a Carlyle
Group board member. Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld was a board member of the Tribune Company,
which operates the <i>Chicago Tribune</I>,
<i>Newsday</I>, the <i>Los Angeles
Times<i> and numerous other newspapers and
television stations. J. Richard Munro, a director
of Exxon-Mobil, was also a Time-Warner board member.
And on and on...
The point is- can listeners, viewers or readers
expect a unbiased view of world events when a board
of directors member for the <i>New York Times</I>
and <i>Boston Globe</I> (Charles Price)
also represents the interests of Texaco, on whose
board of directors he cocurrently serves or from
the <i>Wall Street Journal</I>, whose
board member Rand Araskog also sits on Shell Oil’s
board? Or how about Hollinger International, which
owns London’s <i>Daily Telegraph</I>,
the <i>Chicago Sun-Times</I> and the
<i>Jerusalem Post</> and whose investment
division was headed by Richard Perle, who also sat
on the Pentagon’s Defense Policy Board at
the time of the 9-11 attacks and won millions from
the Homeland Security bonanza for his Trireme Partners
company. Henry Kissinger, who was picked to head
the 9-11 investigation until he opted not to disclose
his clients list, is an advisor for Trireme and
a board member at Hollinger.
It gets much deeper than we can detail further here
but more than enough is sketched above to lend weigh
to the claims of a media in crisis. The corporate
drive to take over the internet, spearheaded by
Verizon and AT&T (another San Antonio-based
company), paints an even darker picture for the
future. How are American interests identified as
feasibly separate from corporate interests when
it is corporate interests and corporately influenced
interests in charge of the discernment? In the context
of how news is distributed in the airwaves of Olive
and the rest of Ulster County and the Hudson Valley,
these questions were key issues on the evening’s
platform.
By their buttons and conversation, as well as by
their response to statements by the speakers, a
primary concern in the audience appeared as questions
about the absence of media outlets for voices in
opposition to the war. Jeff Cohen extended the question
into the political sphere;
"In a country where most of the people want
to set a timetable to bring our troops home from
Iraq- and in New York State that majority is even
higher and, among New York Democrats, that majority
is almost a unanimity, how is it that we have two
senators in the State of New York who just voted
<i>for</i> the war?" Cohen asked
before endorsing Jonathan Tasini in the Democratic
primary for U.S. Senate, another comment which drew
approval from the crowd. (A drive to support Tasini
in the lobby passed out flyers that registered the
cost of the Iraqi war to Kingston, alone, as $23.9
million thusfar, which could have paid for 1,019
four-year university scholarships or other listed
preferences. The flyers included the names of local
residents who did not return alive from Iraq as
part of the human costs of the war.)
"Overall, the public has historically had an
expectation that the media reports facts, does it
job fact-checking and investigating the truth,"
said NCRM founder Andi Novick when reached days
after the event. "That’s not been true
for a while and I don’t know how much of the
public has caught on to that. It’s much worse
now because of consolidation and because of the
control the owners assert over their editors and
journalists. Whatever firewall existed between the
owners and the news department doesn’t exist
anymore."
Novick said that the goal of the new group, formed
officially at the beginning of the year, was to
spread attention to the work of independent media
as widely as possible and "raise awareness
of the shortcomings of the existing predominant
system so that people become aware that we don’t
have a free press- that the media system we do have
is the result of corrupt government policy and monopoly
control that’s been condoned by government.
Hopefully, awareness of those issues will cause
people to want to become more active and fight back
against that system."
"Americans have lost the right to elect their
government," Novick said, noting that was marked
as a key theme of the evening. "We wanted to
draw connections between what was intended as a
free press and the Constitution and why it is necessary
to have a free press- so that you have checks and
balances on those in power and how that’s
been lost. Once that’s lost, everything else
gets lost- like the rest of the rights declared
in the Constitution."
................................................
A summation of the views expressed at the Citizens
for Responsible Media’s groundbreaking event
can be said to approximate the following:
If "information is the currency of democracy,"as
Thomas Jefferson wrote, then corporate media is
bankrupting America. A stifling of dissenting or
even inconvenient voices tends to distort the complexion
of national opinion. Against the rocketing rise
of alternate media outlets, the primary entities
downplaying the media crisis, as proclaimed by the
stunning success of this event, are in interested
parties in government and in mega-media itself.
Presently, the general drift of mainstream media
is not about the truth of what happens but about
managing perception of events. However, a democratic
electorate, to be part of a viable, effective system,
must be concerned with actuality rather than manipulated
perception. The difference between an informed electorate
and a misled population defines the very meaning
of a democracy.
When information is designated to be a strategic
resource in an ill-defined war at the same time
that war is extended into the perpetual future,
it is tantamount to saying that we are no longer
entitled to truth. This is a condition no democracy
can survive.

Vacationing Near Home
The Olive
Pool is the place to be on a hot and hazy summer
day. Erin Williams, Ivars Opsis, and Jackie Guiditta
are the lifeguards who keep things safe and friendly.
From the pool, the swimmer has a spectacular view
of the mountains through the pines of Davis Park.
The real bonus is that neighbors lounge and converse
on chairs or chat as they do laps or frolic with
children or grandchildren. Stan and Shirley Fischler
are regulars who keep fit with water exercise.
As far as views go, there are picture-postcard scenes
all around Olive. I can’t help but look toward
Boiceville as I drive along Temple’s Pond.
The best view is from Kenozia Lake Road. Other favorite
vistas are from the Dividing Weir. The Sleeping
Indian outlines the mountains toward Hurley, and
the bowl formed by the mountains of West Shokan
is breathtaking. Sam’s and Little Sam’s
meet Highpoint, and the amazing thing is that the
scene is never the same. Seven ridges slope toward
Joe and Sandy Friedel’s house in the Moonhaw.
The colors, cloud patterns, and shadows are an ever-changing
portrait that is reflected in the Ashokan Reservoir.
Chances are you will see an eagle fishing for its
dinner; for sure you will see the Canada Geese that
have chosen this scenic spot to raise a family.
The dam is also a magnet for runners, walkers, bikers,
rollerbladers and strollers. I prefer to park at
the Fry Pan and walk toward the fifteen-arch bridge.
Somehow the abandoned guard shacks, concrete barriers,
unfriendly signs and prison-like searchlights spoil
the pristine view of the Lemon Squeeze. This morning
I met Bob Nevins doing his two-mile constitutional
and Betsy Wise and son biking before seven. Notice
the pattern they make as they zigzag to avoid geese
and geese droppings. Could there possibly be a more
beautiful spot to exercise?
We are only twenty minutes from the Strand and Hudson
River. A ride on the Teal or Rip Van Winkle offers
fresh air and tour of mansions that line this historic
river. Our family reads boat names and “window
shops” as we declare dozens of times, “Wow,
there’s a nice boat!” John Lanzaratta
dubbed our boat, which is docked at Hideaway Marina,
The Never Sail because it doesn’t get used
very much. Although it has no visible name, but
my husband wants to christen it “Think Snow.”
A boat ride is a treat in itself. Some boaters dock
and swim while others fish. Striper season brings
out the master fishermen: Bob Olson, Billy Hornbeck,
Ed Burkhardt and Greg DeSano. Others fish the Esopus
Creek for browns and rainbow trout or the lower
basin of the reservoir for bass, pike or trout.
Some use bait, but the dedicated fly fisherman sticks
to those special flies tied by hand. Ray Smith and
Marty Warness were the renowned fly-tiers in this
area, but Ed Ostopczuk has joined their expert ranks.
The waterfront always whets my appetite. The ride
up to Catskill for a dockside lunch is delightful
as is sitting on a table outside on the Strand watching
the parade of boaters. What is a vacation without
“eating out?” Olive and its surrounding
towns have a plethora of fine restaurants. I am
convinced that there could not be such varied and
high quality dining in a twenty-mile radius anywhere
else.
If a cruise or a Caribbean vacation is not on your
schedule, try vacationing in the Catskills. Sometimes
inviting a few friends to grill out and share food
and laughs is the best mini-vacation of all!
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