Jump to content

Community radio: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Wikified mention of Resonance FM
Line 9: Line 9:
Access Stations include:
Access Stations include:


*Resonance FM - in London, run by the [[London Musician's Collective]].
*[[Resonance FM]] - in London, run by the [[London Musician's Collective]].
*Sound Radio - serving a range of groups in [[Hackney]] in [[London]].
*Sound Radio - serving a range of groups in [[Hackney]] in [[London]].
*BCB - serving [[Bradford]]'s diverse communities, with a mix of ethnic programming, specialist music and sport.
*BCB - serving [[Bradford]]'s diverse communities, with a mix of ethnic programming, specialist music and sport.

Revision as of 17:11, 22 July 2004

In the UK, the term community radio, has recently been taken up by the radio industry regulator Ofcom as the name for its proposed 'third tier' of the UK radio industry. The idea for this new level of radio broadcasting was piloted by the Radio Authority (now Ofcom) in 2002 with the licensing of 15 'Access radio' stations (the term has now been replaced by community radio). The one year licenses were extended in 2003 for a further year, and in 2004 a consultation was issued by Ofcom on the creation of community radio.

In the United States, community radio is used to describe non-profit, and generally non-commercial, radio stations within a community. The stations are often staffed by volunteers and air a wide variety of programming. Some examples of U.S. community radio stations are WAIF in Cincinnati, Ohio, KGNU in Boulder, Colorado, WMNF in Tampa, Florida. These community radio stations are licensed by the Federal Communications Commission and should not be confused with so-called pirate radio, which broadcasts without a license.

The Access Radio Pilot

The Access Radio Pilot, initiated by the UK Radio Authority, was designed to test the demand for community radio and to see whether such small-scale radio broadcasting projects were feasible. Some of the projects targeted a particular community of interest, ranging from religious and minority groups to children and older people, others such as Manchester's ALLFM and WythenshaweFM targetted geographical communities.

Access Stations include:

  • Resonance FM - in London, run by the London Musician's Collective.
  • Sound Radio - serving a range of groups in Hackney in London.
  • BCB - serving Bradford's diverse communities, with a mix of ethnic programming, specialist music and sport.
  • Desi Radio - in London, serving the Punjabi community.
  • [1] ALLFM96.9 - serving the communities of Ardwick, Longsight & Levenshulme in Manchester.
  • [2]WythenshaweFM - serving the large housing estate of that name in Manchester.

See http://ofcom.org.uk for downloads of the two New Voices evaluation reports of the scheme

The Ofcom Community Radio Consultation

The Ofcom community radio consultation was issued on 17th February 2004. The consultation gave a brief outline of the Access radio projects, and made some proposals as to how the new sector would be managed. Included in the consultation were a series of questions which interested parties were invited to suggest comments on. These included whether community radio stations should have a cap of 50% of their income coming from advertising, and the order and method by which licenses should be applied for.

The closing date for contributions was 20th April 2004, and since this date all of the contributions have been published on the Ofcom website. Ofcom will shortly publish a summary of the responses, and will then make some decisions on how community radio will progress in the UK.