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Petition Filed to Halt Sale of WRVU
PETITION FILED TO HALT SALE OF WRVU LICENSE.

Nashville, TN – July 5, 2012 – Attorneys Michael
Couzens and Alan Korn, acting on behalf of WRVU Friends & Family,
have filed a petition with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
to deny the renewal of license for the Vanderbilt University radio
station WRVU Nashville.
The petition by WRVU Friends & Family—a non-profit organization
established last year by a group of community listeners, DJs, and
Vanderbilt alumni—asserts that Vanderbilt Student Communications (VSC)
acted ultra vires (in excess of legal authority) in initiating a sale
agreement with Nashville Public Radio station WPLN. The petition states:
• VSC’s corporate charter and bylaws prohibit VSC from selling and/or relinquishing control of WRVU.
• The VSC board that voted to sell WRVU violated FCC Rules and
Regulations with a series of substantial and abrupt changes to its
board’s voting majority membership, of which it repeatedly failed to
notify or seek approval from the FCC.
• The terms of the agreements between VSC and WPLN evince an attempt
by both parties to circumvent FCC Rules and Regulations prohibiting the
sale of airtime.
• Under the Management and Programming Agreement, VSC has
relinquished control of the license’s management, programming, operation
and financing to WPLN. This constitutes de facto grant of control over
the license without Commission approval, a serious violation of the
Communications Act.
• The FCC cannot make the necessary determination as to whether
renewal of VSC’s license is in the public interest when WPLN is the
entity in control of that license and VSC is but a zombie licensee that
will provide no public service in the renewal term, but will simply
collect its bargained-for cash price.
“[License] Renewal under these circumstances is simply not in the
public interest,” says a statement from WRVU Friends and Family. “We are
confident that the FCC will give due consideration to the issues we
raise and will ultimately reject VSC’s renewal application while the
agreements with WPLN are in place.”
Although a classical music feed from a studio at WPLN’s offices has
been broadcast on 91.1 FM since June 7, 2011, the sale of WRVU’s license
to Nashville Public Radio cannot be completed until Nashville Public
Radio raises $3,250,000 from its supporters, and VSC receives
authorization from the FCC to transfer control of the noncommercial
license to Nashville Public Radio.
In spite of being one of the nation’s top college radio stations
(averaging 28,500 unique weekly listeners from July to October 2010) in
one of the country’s major music markets, WRVU has joined a notable
number of other endangered college radio stations in the U.S. The
Chronicle of Higher Education and the New York Times have been covering
the plight of college radio:
Chronicle of Higher Education, “What’s Eating College Radio?” Read HERE.
The New York Times, “As Stations Are Sold, Debate About College Radio” Read HERE.
Contact: Jeremy Benjamin, jeremyben@gmail.com; 646.457.2345 |