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Fall 2004 Elections Information
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Candidate Statements:
Staff
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Campaign Period Extended to Nov.29
Election Committee Update - Oct.13
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FCP Enforcement
Retroactive Enforcement of FCP) Candidates Calling into Shows
October 4:
Updated Information
from the National Elections Supervisor
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Elections
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FAQ - Staff
1. How many staff Delegate seats are up for election
at each station?
2. How many seats do staff get on the new National
Board of Directors?
3. How is it determined if an individual staff member
is eligible to vote?
4. At a station that DOES have an unpaid staff organization,
can an unpaid staff person who has done over 30 hours of staff work
qualify to vote even if he or she is not a member of the unpaid
staff organization?
5. What if I have performed over 30 hours of unpaid
work producing station programming, but am not a member of my station's
unpaid staff organization – am I still eligible to participate in
the staff Delegate election?
6. What sort of unpaid staff work can be included
in that minimum of 30 hours of work?
7. What if I believe I have performed the necessary
30 hours of such unpaid staff work, but the station records don't
include me as a member?
8. What about collectives of unpaid individuals that
produce programs? Are all members of the collective entitled to
vote in the staff election as long as the collective has done more
than 30 hours of volunteer work in the three-month period?
9. What if there aren't detailed records of hours
worked by unpaid staff? How is it determined if an individual qualifies?
10. Are station management and national office staff
members allowed to vote in the station staff or listener elections?
11. What about staff of the national office, or free
speech radio news – are they entitled to vote in station elections?
12. Can an individual vote in both a station staff
election and listener election if they meet both sets of qualifications?
13. What is the dividing line between management
and staff?
14. Are candidates for Staff Delegates prohibited
from on-air appearances, or just candidates for Listener Sponsor
Delegates?
15. What if a programmer refuses to sign the fair
campaign pledge not to put candidates on-air?
16. What is the distinction between volunteer Staff
and volunteer Listener Sponsors? Does everyone who puts in 3 hours
per year vote in the Staff election rather than the Listener Sponsor
election?
17. What about quasi-station staff like Free Speech
Radio News people? Do they vote in the staff or the listener elections?
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1. How many staff Delegate seats are up for election at each station?
A. There are six (6) staff Delegate seats on each
Local Station Board. The first three seats filled will have terms
through December 2006, and the next three will have terms through
December 2004. In the Fall 2004 Eelection, 3 staff seats are coming
open for election |
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| 2. How many seats do staff get on the National
Board of Directors?
A. One staff person will be elected to the Board of Directors from each Local Station Board.
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| 3. How is it determined if an individual
staff member is eligible to vote?
A. Any non-management full-time or part-time paid
employee of a Foundation radio station on the “record date” is eligible
to vote in the staff Delegate election. An unpaid staff person is
also eligible to vote in the staff election if he or she is a member
of a Foundation radio station “Unpaid Staff Organization” or “Unpaid
Staff Collective Bargaining Unit” which has been recognized by station
management, or, if the station has neither such organization or
bargaining unit, then a volunteer or unpaid staff member of a Foundation
radio station who has worked for said radio station at least 30
hours in the 3 months prior to the record date, exclusive of volunteer
work on committees of a local station board. Based on the election
schedule established by the court the record date for this election
will be August 31, 2004. An unpaid staff member must have performed
the 30 hours of volunteer labor between September 1, 2003 and Augst
31, 2004. |
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4. At a station that DOES have an unpaid staff organization, can an unpaid staff person who has done over 30 hours of staff work qualify to vote even if he or she is not a member of the unpaid staff organization?
A. No. At such stations an unpaid staff person must be a member
of the organization on August 31, 2004 to be eligible to vote. |
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5. What if
I have performed over 30 hours of unpaid work producing station
programming, but am not a member of my station's unpaid staff organization
– am I still eligible to participate in the staff Delegate election?
A. This depends on whether your station has a
recognized “Unpaid Staff Organization” or “Unpaid Staff Collective
Bargaining Unit” (such as at WBAI and KPFA). If so, then according
to the Bylaws, you must be a member of that organization to be eligible
to vote or run in the staff Delegate election, regardless of how
much staff-like work you may have done in the past three months.
If your station does not have such an unpaid staff organization,
then the 30 hour requirement applies. |
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6. What sort of unpaid staff work can be included in that minimum of 30 hours of work?
A. The work must have been performed under the
general supervision of station management, and may not include work
such as answering phones during the membership drives, or serving
on station committees. It may include both on-air, and behind-the-scenes
preparations for programs, etc. |
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7. What if I believe I have performed the necessary 30 hours of such unpaid staff work, but the station records don't include me as a member?
A. First try to resolve this with the station
management who supervised the unpaid staff work you performed. If
there is still a dispute, you can appeal to the Local Election Supervisor,
who will hear from both sides and issue a decision on whether you
are eligible to vote in this election. Remember, if you are not
eligible to vote in the staff election, you can qualify to vote
in the listener election by contributing $25 to the station before
the record date, or perhaps seeing if at least three of your unpaid
work hours qualify as listener volunteer work under station management
supervision. |
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8. What about collectives of unpaid individuals that produce programs? Are all members of the collective entitled to vote in the staff election as long as the collective has done more than 30 hours of volunteer work in the three-month period?
A. Not unless they are all members of a recognized
“Unpaid Staff Organization” or “Unpaid Staff Collective Bargaining
Unit.” Otherwise, only the individual members of the collective
who have actually and personally performed over 30 hours of volunteer
work during the three-month period are entitled to vote in the staff
election. Volunteer work of less than 30 hours can only count towards
membership rights as a Listener if it was performed under station
management supervision – not normally the case for producer collectives.
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9. What if there aren't detailed records of hours worked by unpaid staff? How is it determined if an individual qualifies?
A. In the future, unpaid staff should document
hours worked. For this transition election, the National Election
Supervisor will establish a series of bench-marks for different
categories of programming (news, music, etc.) relating hours of
on-air time to accepted hours of off-air preparation. Station management
will propose a rough-cut of eligible unpaid staff members based
on the information available. Individuals who wish to appeal a determination
by station management may appeal to the Local Election Supervisor,
who will make a final determination of eligibility. |
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10. Are station management and national office staff members allowed to vote in the station staff or listener elections?
A. Station management and national office staff
and management may not vote in the staff elections, but can join
the foundation as listeners the same regular listeners – give $25
– and vote in the listener election at one station. |
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11. What about staff of the national office, or free speech radio news – are they entitled to vote in station elections?
A. Generally, no. Only if an individual has worked
under the auspices of a particular station's management is that
individual eligible to vote in that station's staff election. They
may, however, qualify the same as other listeners by contributing
to a station, and vote in a listener election. |
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12. Can an individual vote in both a station staff election and listener election if they meet both sets of qualifications?
A. No. An individual who would otherwise qualify for both classes of membership shall be deemed a staff member and may only vote in the staff election, and is prohibited from voting in the listener election.
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13. What is the dividing line between management and staff?
A. WBAI, KPFA, KPFK, and WPFW all have collective
bargaining agreements that define what positions are management.
Using the dividing line between management and non-management in
these station collective bargaining agreements as a guideline, any
of the following job titles at KPFT are considered “management”
and thus excluded from the staff election process: General Manager,
Program Director, Development Director, Business Manager, and Operations
Director. |
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14. Are candidates for Staff Delegates prohibited from on-air appearances, or just candidates for Listener Sponsor Delegates?
A. Staff are allowed on air regardless of whether
they are candidates, but may not discuss the LISTENER candidates.
Listener candidates are allowed on air, but ONLY as part of a Local
Election Supervisor-sanctioned equal access election program, in
a bona fide news story unrelated to the Pacifica election. |
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| 15. What if a programmer refuses
to sign the fair campaign mission not to put candidates on-air?
A. The bylaws REQUIRE all paid and unpaid staff
to sign this statement. Refusal to read and sign the statement
would be grounds for dismissal. A staff person who violates the
fair campaign provisions (whether the statement is signed or not)
can be dealt with as deemed appropriate by the election supervisor,
up to and including keeping that staff person off the air until
the election is over. Signed provisions must be submitted to the
Elections Supervisor by September 1, 2004 |
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16. What is the distinction between volunteer Staff and volunteer Listener Sponsors? Does everyone who puts in 3 hours per year vote in the Staff election rather than the Listener Sponsor election?
A. Three hours of volunteer is no where NEAR enough
to allow voting in the staff election. The bylaws recognize unpaid
staff members of a staff unit or if no organization exists at a
station, who have done 30 (not 3) hours of work during the past
three months (not year). The 3 hour volunteer work for eligibility
only applies to listener-members. Any disputes about who qualifies
for inclusion in the staff election should, if possible, be resolved
internally with station management, with an appeal to the Election
Supervisor as a next option. The Election Supervisors have the ultimate
authority In setting the voting lists.
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17. What about quasi-station staff like Free Speech Radio News people? Do they vote in the staff or the listener elections?
A. if a FSRN individual is under the general supervision
of one station's program director, then that individual could qualify
(if they meet the other staff criteria) as station staff. But if
they do their work outside the organizational structure of any particular
station, they cannot be deemed "station staff," but are more like
independent contractors. In this case they would be allowed to join
as listeners (the same as national staff are allowed). Then they
could vote in the listener elections, but not be a candidate unless
they stayed off the air until the close of balloting (due to the
fair campaign provisions).
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All mail should be directed to:
Bobby Muldoon
KPFT Elections Supervisor:
419 Lovett Blvd
Houston TX 77006
elections@kpft.org
KPFT elections hotline: 713-526-4000 ext. 305
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