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Thursday, December 30, 2004
Monday, December 27, 2004
Update on Brian's Health
Date: Sun, 26 Dec 2004 15:16:28 -0500
From: "Brian Dragonuk"
Subject: Update on Brian's Health
Hey Everyone This is Brian
I know a lot of your are concerned about my health lately and I have
some more news
Most good some not so good.
Gale Sent you the last update in early December and to bring all of
you up to speed
I want to start a Little before that.
Many of you that know me well have known a;; along that I am a
diabetic (Type 2) I take a few
pills , watch what I eat and TRY to loose weight. I have been able to
work regularly ( including the long days -- up to 38 hrs) and live
comfortably on my "Actors Pay".as a full time actor for over 4 years.
Only when the Leukemia ( Chemo) cut my income by 2/3rds this year
while raising my expenses by over 500% did I have to turn to all of
you for help-- What a blessing you all are.
In early December I had my 3rd CT Scan of the year (and a ton of blood
work) so my Cancer Dr could evaluate the 6 months of Chemo. I also had
a complete Physical, Blood work & Urine tests
by my GP on the diabetes--- Everything came back GREAT No signs of
Cancer-- Best Blood Sugar readings in 2 years--liver test normal etc.
The only down side was going thru 6 months of Chemo and not being
able to loose 5 lbs (I had really hoped that Chemo would at least help
me loose 20 lbs---- But NOOOOO!!!!!!)
Any Way here is the Bad news part one of the things that happens with
diabetes is diabetic retinopathy basically it causes blood vessels to
form & grow in the eyes ( Where they don't Belong) and the are
extremely Fragile--These vessels break and bleed into the eye
Thats What is going on with my right eye. My vision is extremely
blurred in it & there is a blood clot that has to be removed ( Because
of the holiday staff reductions at the Wilmer Eye Clinic -- Hopkins
--- I am not sure exactly when I will have the surgery but it looks
like Wednesday or Thursday) . They did Laser surgery on the Left eye
this past Wednesday (about 45 min)
to seal off the blood vessels growing wild in it but the Right eye
with the clot is a 4-5 hr surgery Then the laser treatment.
Now also because of the Staff holiday Schedule I have the Chief of
Surgery at the Eye unit working on me and he see's no permanent damage
in either eye---so once he is finished things should be back to normal
(At least until the next thing breaks on me)
Before I get to the Funny part of all of this ( YES I AM STILL IN GOOD
SPIRITS)
For those of you that want ti wish me well ( Or Those of you that know
I will be 52 in 2 weeks)
Please do not e-mail me messages--- Luckily this time of year there
are fewer messages with jobs, networking or training information in
them for me to read---I can handle them but a lot of Personal emails
right now would really bog things down .
Please Snail mail them to me at
Brian Dragonuk
3701 Burmont Ave
Randallstown Md 21133
Now for the Future Saturday Night Live Sketch ( If I Ever Get famous)
I have been working with my 4 year old Nephew making Christmas Gifts
for his mother, my other sister, My mother and my Great Aunt-- We
Chose to paint some things for them.
I had gotten some Small wooden hearts ( about 6 inches) that we
painted red and we glued photo's of J.C. ( My Nephew) on them , plus I
had 4 5 in angles for him to paint & 2 6 inch Xmas trees that not only
had to be painted but have glitter sprinkled on them, Now add the 4
year old and take the vision out of one eye and reduce the vision in
the other one due to swelling from laser surgery.
Got the Picture
Now Remember you promised him that he could make his first Pumpkin
Cake so he could bring it to xmas dinner..
Remember Also that while he has used a wire whisk on eggs before you
told him HE could break the eggs this time (Another first)
I know there is something of a comedy sketch here but J.C. Prevailed
with out a hitch ( the only thing that really kept this in prospective
for me ( Besides the look on J.C.'s Face) was the knowledge that even
when I can see CLEAN-UP IS SOMEONE ELSE'S JOB---NOT MINE
I'll do all the hard stuff--then I'm Done
Brian
From: "Brian Dragonuk"
Subject: Update on Brian's Health
Hey Everyone This is Brian
I know a lot of your are concerned about my health lately and I have
some more news
Most good some not so good.
Gale Sent you the last update in early December and to bring all of
you up to speed
I want to start a Little before that.
Many of you that know me well have known a;; along that I am a
diabetic (Type 2) I take a few
pills , watch what I eat and TRY to loose weight. I have been able to
work regularly ( including the long days -- up to 38 hrs) and live
comfortably on my "Actors Pay".as a full time actor for over 4 years.
Only when the Leukemia ( Chemo) cut my income by 2/3rds this year
while raising my expenses by over 500% did I have to turn to all of
you for help-- What a blessing you all are.
In early December I had my 3rd CT Scan of the year (and a ton of blood
work) so my Cancer Dr could evaluate the 6 months of Chemo. I also had
a complete Physical, Blood work & Urine tests
by my GP on the diabetes--- Everything came back GREAT No signs of
Cancer-- Best Blood Sugar readings in 2 years--liver test normal etc.
The only down side was going thru 6 months of Chemo and not being
able to loose 5 lbs (I had really hoped that Chemo would at least help
me loose 20 lbs---- But NOOOOO!!!!!!)
Any Way here is the Bad news part one of the things that happens with
diabetes is diabetic retinopathy basically it causes blood vessels to
form & grow in the eyes ( Where they don't Belong) and the are
extremely Fragile--These vessels break and bleed into the eye
Thats What is going on with my right eye. My vision is extremely
blurred in it & there is a blood clot that has to be removed ( Because
of the holiday staff reductions at the Wilmer Eye Clinic -- Hopkins
--- I am not sure exactly when I will have the surgery but it looks
like Wednesday or Thursday) . They did Laser surgery on the Left eye
this past Wednesday (about 45 min)
to seal off the blood vessels growing wild in it but the Right eye
with the clot is a 4-5 hr surgery Then the laser treatment.
Now also because of the Staff holiday Schedule I have the Chief of
Surgery at the Eye unit working on me and he see's no permanent damage
in either eye---so once he is finished things should be back to normal
(At least until the next thing breaks on me)
Before I get to the Funny part of all of this ( YES I AM STILL IN GOOD
SPIRITS)
For those of you that want ti wish me well ( Or Those of you that know
I will be 52 in 2 weeks)
Please do not e-mail me messages--- Luckily this time of year there
are fewer messages with jobs, networking or training information in
them for me to read---I can handle them but a lot of Personal emails
right now would really bog things down .
Please Snail mail them to me at
Brian Dragonuk
3701 Burmont Ave
Randallstown Md 21133
Now for the Future Saturday Night Live Sketch ( If I Ever Get famous)
I have been working with my 4 year old Nephew making Christmas Gifts
for his mother, my other sister, My mother and my Great Aunt-- We
Chose to paint some things for them.
I had gotten some Small wooden hearts ( about 6 inches) that we
painted red and we glued photo's of J.C. ( My Nephew) on them , plus I
had 4 5 in angles for him to paint & 2 6 inch Xmas trees that not only
had to be painted but have glitter sprinkled on them, Now add the 4
year old and take the vision out of one eye and reduce the vision in
the other one due to swelling from laser surgery.
Got the Picture
Now Remember you promised him that he could make his first Pumpkin
Cake so he could bring it to xmas dinner..
Remember Also that while he has used a wire whisk on eggs before you
told him HE could break the eggs this time (Another first)
I know there is something of a comedy sketch here but J.C. Prevailed
with out a hitch ( the only thing that really kept this in prospective
for me ( Besides the look on J.C.'s Face) was the knowledge that even
when I can see CLEAN-UP IS SOMEONE ELSE'S JOB---NOT MINE
I'll do all the hard stuff--then I'm Done
Brian
Wednesday, December 22, 2004
Movie Makers' Symposium, Blue Rock Productions, Wednesday Janurary 19, 2005 (snow date the following Wednesday), 6:30 - 9:30 p.m.
Attention Movie Makers
We've had a lot of requests to have another Movie Makers' Symposium.
Last year's event was a big success and we hope to top it this year.
What is it?
An informal gathering of movie makers of all sorts.
Most of us work on small indie films shot on MiniDV or
16mm film.
We will have some demonstrations, some free food, a couple of screening
rooms to show our latest projects, and much more - all in a fantastic
location at Blue Rock Productions in Northwest Baltimore. (www.bluerockproductions.com)
There will be a $5 donation at the door to pay for food,
drinks and other costs.
Last year we had several producers, directors, animators, stunt people,
sound people, actors, etc. A lot of contacts were made.
Some people got hired. Everybody had a good time.
I will have more details in the next couple of weeks as we get
rolling on this, but the basics are:
DATE: Wednesday Janurary 19, 2005
(snow date the following Wednesday)
TIME: 6:30 - 9:30 p.m.
PLACE: Blue Rock Productions in Northwest Baltimore.
Everyone is encouraged to bring cards, demos, and handouts.
You can even bring a table and set up a display if you want
-- at no charge. We want people to connect.
We want people to schmooze. We want people to find work!
Send me an email for more details and to volunteer
to put on a demostration.
Craig Herron
Writer, Producer, Director, Animator
www.herrondesigns.com www.afallfromtheclouds.com
co-host Gregg Landry
Blue Rock Productions
We've had a lot of requests to have another Movie Makers' Symposium.
Last year's event was a big success and we hope to top it this year.
What is it?
An informal gathering of movie makers of all sorts.
Most of us work on small indie films shot on MiniDV or
16mm film.
We will have some demonstrations, some free food, a couple of screening
rooms to show our latest projects, and much more - all in a fantastic
location at Blue Rock Productions in Northwest Baltimore. (www.bluerockproductions.com)
There will be a $5 donation at the door to pay for food,
drinks and other costs.
Last year we had several producers, directors, animators, stunt people,
sound people, actors, etc. A lot of contacts were made.
Some people got hired. Everybody had a good time.
I will have more details in the next couple of weeks as we get
rolling on this, but the basics are:
DATE: Wednesday Janurary 19, 2005
(snow date the following Wednesday)
TIME: 6:30 - 9:30 p.m.
PLACE: Blue Rock Productions in Northwest Baltimore.
Everyone is encouraged to bring cards, demos, and handouts.
You can even bring a table and set up a display if you want
-- at no charge. We want people to connect.
We want people to schmooze. We want people to find work!
Send me an email for more details and to volunteer
to put on a demostration.
Craig Herron
Writer, Producer, Director, Animator
www.herrondesigns.com www.afallfromtheclouds.com
co-host Gregg Landry
Blue Rock Productions
Monday, December 20, 2004
This Wednesday launching the new Charm City Green Party at Red Emma's, 800 St. Paul St., corner of St. P and Madison, at 7PM.
This Wednesday we're launching the new Charm City Green Party at Red Emma's, 800 St. Paul St., corner of St. P and Madison, at 7PM.
With over 45,000 votes cast for Green candidates in Baltimore City alone, it's obvious that there's a desire for something different. If you're new to the Green Party or need a reason to come back, come by on Wednesday and check us out. Some of the old faces should be there as well as new ones!
We have a strong commitment to activism and educating the public on how real change is possible.
Hope you all can come by Wednesday. Red Emma's is a collective book store with food license now, (bagels, coffee, etc.)
Myles
former Green Party candidate for City Council
With over 45,000 votes cast for Green candidates in Baltimore City alone, it's obvious that there's a desire for something different. If you're new to the Green Party or need a reason to come back, come by on Wednesday and check us out. Some of the old faces should be there as well as new ones!
We have a strong commitment to activism and educating the public on how real change is possible.
Hope you all can come by Wednesday. Red Emma's is a collective book store with food license now, (bagels, coffee, etc.)
Myles
former Green Party candidate for City Council
Friday, December 10, 2004
BGM Meeting Change for 12/14, at Red Emma's Bookstore and Cafe, on 800 St. Paul St., at 6:30 PM.
Subject: [BGM] BGM Meeting Change for 12/14
There is to be a change of venue for next week's BGM meeting: we'll be meeting at Red Emma's Bookstore and Cafe, on 800 St. Paul St., at 6:30 PM. We'll be strategizing as to what to do next, in the wake of the passage of the Comcast contract by the City Council.
Some folks have come to me and asked: "BGM is still meeting? But I thought it was all over!" No, it's not over yet; on the contrary there is much left to be done! We're still going to have to be a watchdog over the Mayor and Council to make sure that the new public access organization is developed in a timely way and that the money that is supposed to go to public access is held in trust until that time. We're also going to have to lobby the Mayor's Office of Cable to provide for a new home for public access in the meantime so that volunteers can have access and keep it afloat.
There are alot of other actions on the table right now, so please come out and share your ideas and energy to benefit public access in Baltimore!
What: BGM weekly meeting
When: Tues., Dec 14, 2004
6:30 PM
Where: Red Emma's Bookstore Coffeehouse
800 St Paul Street
Let me know if you have any questions.
Best,
Amanda
410-721-6458
There is to be a change of venue for next week's BGM meeting: we'll be meeting at Red Emma's Bookstore and Cafe, on 800 St. Paul St., at 6:30 PM. We'll be strategizing as to what to do next, in the wake of the passage of the Comcast contract by the City Council.
Some folks have come to me and asked: "BGM is still meeting? But I thought it was all over!" No, it's not over yet; on the contrary there is much left to be done! We're still going to have to be a watchdog over the Mayor and Council to make sure that the new public access organization is developed in a timely way and that the money that is supposed to go to public access is held in trust until that time. We're also going to have to lobby the Mayor's Office of Cable to provide for a new home for public access in the meantime so that volunteers can have access and keep it afloat.
There are alot of other actions on the table right now, so please come out and share your ideas and energy to benefit public access in Baltimore!
What: BGM weekly meeting
When: Tues., Dec 14, 2004
6:30 PM
Where: Red Emma's Bookstore Coffeehouse
800 St Paul Street
Let me know if you have any questions.
Best,
Amanda
410-721-6458
Wednesday, December 08, 2004
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Monday, December 06, 2004
Final Vote scheduled for TODAY, Monday 12/6 at 5PM (Come to City Hall)
Alternative TV in Baltimore? You decide.
Final Vote scheduled for TODAY, Monday 12/6 at 5PM (Come to City Hall)
The Senator Theatre Weighs in on Public Access TV
Baltimore IMC Coverage:
http://baltimore.indymedia.org/newswire/display/9012/index.php
WBAL TV Coverage:
http://www.thewbalchannel.com/news/3973047/detail.html
Baltimore Grassroots Media:
www.BaltimoreGrassrootsMedia.org
Contact Sheila Dixon's Office and your Council Members to seek postponement of the Comcast Cable vote:
City Council Member
Phone
Fax
Email
Sheila Dixon
410-396-4804
410-539-0647
sdixon@baltimorecitycouncil.com
John L. Cain
410-396-4807
410-545-6632
jcain@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Nicholas C. D'Adamo, Jr.
410-396-4808
410-396-4414
ndadamo@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Lois Garey
410-396-4828
410-545-6617
lgarey@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Paula Johnson Branch
410-396-4829
410-396-1594
pbranch@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Bernard C. "Jack" Young
410-396-4811
410-396-1594
byoung@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Pamela V. Carter
410-396-4810
410-545-7694
pcarter@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Robert W. Curran
410-396-4812
410-396-8621
rcurran@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Kenneth N. Harris, Sr.
410-396-4830
410-659-1792
kharris@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Lisa Joi Stancil
410-396-4813
410-396-8621
lstancil@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Agnes Welch
410-396-4815
410-545-3857
awelch@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Keiffer Jackson Mitchell, Jr.
410-396-4816
410-545-7464
kmitchell@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Carherine E. Pugh
410-396-4831
410-545-7581
cpugh@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Rochelle "Rikki" Spector
410-396-4819
410-396-6800
rspector@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Helen Holton
410-396-4818
410-396-6800
hholton@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Stephanie Rawlings Blake
410-396-4832
410-396-6800
srawlings@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Kwame Osayaba Abayomi
410-396-4821
410-545-3847
kabayomi@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Melvin Stukes
410-396-4833
410-396-8465
mstukes@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Edward Reisinger
410-396-4822
410-545-7353
ereisinger@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Final Vote scheduled for TODAY, Monday 12/6 at 5PM (Come to City Hall)
The Senator Theatre Weighs in on Public Access TV
Baltimore IMC Coverage:
http://baltimore.indymedia.org/newswire/display/9012/index.php
WBAL TV Coverage:
http://www.thewbalchannel.com/news/3973047/detail.html
Baltimore Grassroots Media:
www.BaltimoreGrassrootsMedia.org
Contact Sheila Dixon's Office and your Council Members to seek postponement of the Comcast Cable vote:
City Council Member
Phone
Fax
Sheila Dixon
410-396-4804
410-539-0647
sdixon@baltimorecitycouncil.com
John L. Cain
410-396-4807
410-545-6632
jcain@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Nicholas C. D'Adamo, Jr.
410-396-4808
410-396-4414
ndadamo@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Lois Garey
410-396-4828
410-545-6617
lgarey@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Paula Johnson Branch
410-396-4829
410-396-1594
pbranch@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Bernard C. "Jack" Young
410-396-4811
410-396-1594
byoung@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Pamela V. Carter
410-396-4810
410-545-7694
pcarter@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Robert W. Curran
410-396-4812
410-396-8621
rcurran@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Kenneth N. Harris, Sr.
410-396-4830
410-659-1792
kharris@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Lisa Joi Stancil
410-396-4813
410-396-8621
lstancil@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Agnes Welch
410-396-4815
410-545-3857
awelch@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Keiffer Jackson Mitchell, Jr.
410-396-4816
410-545-7464
kmitchell@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Carherine E. Pugh
410-396-4831
410-545-7581
cpugh@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Rochelle "Rikki" Spector
410-396-4819
410-396-6800
rspector@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Helen Holton
410-396-4818
410-396-6800
hholton@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Stephanie Rawlings Blake
410-396-4832
410-396-6800
srawlings@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Kwame Osayaba Abayomi
410-396-4821
410-545-3847
kabayomi@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Melvin Stukes
410-396-4833
410-396-8465
mstukes@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Edward Reisinger
410-396-4822
410-545-7353
ereisinger@baltimorecitycouncil.com
The Baltimore City Council
The Baltimore City Council
District 1 Members:
John L. Cain
Phone: (410) 396-4807
Fax: (410) 545-6632
Room: 423
Email: jcain@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Land Use and Planning; Highways and Franchises Subcommittee - Chair
Housing, Health, and Human Services
Taxation
Nicholas D'Amado Jr.
Phone: (410) 396-4808
Fax: (410) 396-4414
Room: 525
Email: ndadamo@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Budget and Appropriations
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations
Lois Garey
Phone: (410) 396-4828
Fax: (410) 545-6617
Room: 422
Email: lgarey@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Land Use and Planning - Chair
Executive Appointments
Urban Affairrs
* * *
District 2 Members:
Paula Johnson Branch
Phone: (410) 396-4829
Fax: (410) 396-1594
Room: 511
Email: pbranch@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Urban Affairs - Chair
Budget and Appropriations
Land Use and Planning
Bernard C. "Jack" Young
Phone: (410) 396-4811
Fax: (410) 396-1594
Room: 509
Email: byoung@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Executive Appointments - Chair
Recreation and Parks Subcommittee - Chair
Urban Affairs
Taxation
Pamela V. Carter
Phone: (410) 396-4810
Fax: (410) 545-7694
Room: 550
Email: pcarter@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Taxation - Vice Chair
Housing, Health, and Human Services
Executive Appointments
* * *
District 3 Members:
Robert Curran
Phone: (410) 396-4812
Fax: (410) 396-8621
Room: 504
Email: rcurran@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations - Chair
Taxation
Executive Appointments
Kenneth N. Harris, Sr.
Phone: (410) 396-4830
Fax: (410) 659-1792
Room: 503
Email: kharris@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Executive Appointments - Vice Chair
Budget and Appropriations - Vice Chair
Housing, Health, and Human Services
Lisa Joi Stancil
Phone: (410) 396-4813
Fax: (410) 396-8621
Room: 551
Email: lstancil@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Finance - Vice Chair
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations
Land Use and Planning
* * *
District 4 Members:
Agnes Welch
Phone: (410) 396-4815
Fax: (410) 545-3857
Room: 532
Email: awelch@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Housing, Health, and Human Services
Aging Subcommittee - Chair
Urban Affairs - Vice Chair
Finance
Keiffer Jackson Mitchell, Jr.
Phone: (410) 396-4816
Fax: (410) 545-7464
Room: 527
Email: kmitchell@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Taxation - Chair
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations
Urban Affairs
Catherine E. Pugh
Phone: (410) 396-4831
Fax: (410) 545-7581
Room: 523
Email: cpugh@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Taxation Subcommittee on Economic Development - Chair
Land Use and Planning - Vice Chair
Urban Affairs
* * *
District 5 Members:
Rochelle "Rikki" Spector
Phone: (410) 396-4819
Fax: (410) 396-6800
Room: 521
Email: rspector@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations
Finance
Land Use and Planning
Helen Holton
Phone: (410) 396-4818
Fax: (410) 396-6800
Room: 518
Email: hholton@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Finance - Chair
Budget and Appropriations
Stephanie Rawlings Blake
Phone: (410) 396-4832
Fax: (410) 396-6800
Room: 516
Email: srawlings@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations - Chair
Budget and Appropriations - Chair
Finance
* * *
District 6 Members:
Kwame Osayaba Abayomi, D.D.
Phone: (410) 396-4821
Fax: (410) 545-3847
Room: 505
Email: kabayomi@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations, Public Safety Subcommittee - Chair
Housing, Health, and Human Services
Finance
Melvin Stukes
Phone: (410) 396-4833
Fax: (410) 396-8465
Room: 553
Email: mstukes@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Housing, Health, and Human Services - Vice Chair; Education and Labor Subcommittee - Chair
Taxation
Land Use and Planning; Transportation Subcommittee - Chair
Edward Reisinger
Phone: (410) 396-4822
Fax: (410) 545-7353
Room: 424
Email: ereisinger@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Housing, Health, and Human Services - Chair
Budget and Appropriations
Urban Affairs
District 1 Members:
John L. Cain
Phone: (410) 396-4807
Fax: (410) 545-6632
Room: 423
Email: jcain@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Land Use and Planning; Highways and Franchises Subcommittee - Chair
Housing, Health, and Human Services
Taxation
Nicholas D'Amado Jr.
Phone: (410) 396-4808
Fax: (410) 396-4414
Room: 525
Email: ndadamo@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Budget and Appropriations
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations
Lois Garey
Phone: (410) 396-4828
Fax: (410) 545-6617
Room: 422
Email: lgarey@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Land Use and Planning - Chair
Executive Appointments
Urban Affairrs
* * *
District 2 Members:
Paula Johnson Branch
Phone: (410) 396-4829
Fax: (410) 396-1594
Room: 511
Email: pbranch@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Urban Affairs - Chair
Budget and Appropriations
Land Use and Planning
Bernard C. "Jack" Young
Phone: (410) 396-4811
Fax: (410) 396-1594
Room: 509
Email: byoung@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Executive Appointments - Chair
Recreation and Parks Subcommittee - Chair
Urban Affairs
Taxation
Pamela V. Carter
Phone: (410) 396-4810
Fax: (410) 545-7694
Room: 550
Email: pcarter@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Taxation - Vice Chair
Housing, Health, and Human Services
Executive Appointments
* * *
District 3 Members:
Robert Curran
Phone: (410) 396-4812
Fax: (410) 396-8621
Room: 504
Email: rcurran@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations - Chair
Taxation
Executive Appointments
Kenneth N. Harris, Sr.
Phone: (410) 396-4830
Fax: (410) 659-1792
Room: 503
Email: kharris@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Executive Appointments - Vice Chair
Budget and Appropriations - Vice Chair
Housing, Health, and Human Services
Lisa Joi Stancil
Phone: (410) 396-4813
Fax: (410) 396-8621
Room: 551
Email: lstancil@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Finance - Vice Chair
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations
Land Use and Planning
* * *
District 4 Members:
Agnes Welch
Phone: (410) 396-4815
Fax: (410) 545-3857
Room: 532
Email: awelch@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Housing, Health, and Human Services
Aging Subcommittee - Chair
Urban Affairs - Vice Chair
Finance
Keiffer Jackson Mitchell, Jr.
Phone: (410) 396-4816
Fax: (410) 545-7464
Room: 527
Email: kmitchell@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Taxation - Chair
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations
Urban Affairs
Catherine E. Pugh
Phone: (410) 396-4831
Fax: (410) 545-7581
Room: 523
Email: cpugh@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Taxation Subcommittee on Economic Development - Chair
Land Use and Planning - Vice Chair
Urban Affairs
* * *
District 5 Members:
Rochelle "Rikki" Spector
Phone: (410) 396-4819
Fax: (410) 396-6800
Room: 521
Email: rspector@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations
Finance
Land Use and Planning
Helen Holton
Phone: (410) 396-4818
Fax: (410) 396-6800
Room: 518
Email: hholton@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Finance - Chair
Budget and Appropriations
Stephanie Rawlings Blake
Phone: (410) 396-4832
Fax: (410) 396-6800
Room: 516
Email: srawlings@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations - Chair
Budget and Appropriations - Chair
Finance
* * *
District 6 Members:
Kwame Osayaba Abayomi, D.D.
Phone: (410) 396-4821
Fax: (410) 545-3847
Room: 505
Email: kabayomi@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Judiciary and Legislative Investigations, Public Safety Subcommittee - Chair
Housing, Health, and Human Services
Finance
Melvin Stukes
Phone: (410) 396-4833
Fax: (410) 396-8465
Room: 553
Email: mstukes@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Housing, Health, and Human Services - Vice Chair; Education and Labor Subcommittee - Chair
Taxation
Land Use and Planning; Transportation Subcommittee - Chair
Edward Reisinger
Phone: (410) 396-4822
Fax: (410) 545-7353
Room: 424
Email: ereisinger@baltimorecitycouncil.com
Committee Assignments:
Housing, Health, and Human Services - Chair
Budget and Appropriations
Urban Affairs
Cable panel urged mayor not to back Comcast deal
From the November 16th Baltimore Sun:
Cable panel urged mayor
not to back Comcast deal
Panel advised O'Malley against cable deal;
officials say they didn't know
By Doug Donovan
Sun Staff
November 16, 2004
Mayor Martin O'Malley failed to follow the advice of his expert cable advisory panel when he pushed a new 12-year cable television deal with Comcast through the Board of Estimates.
And with the contract now awaiting City Council approval, council members say they still haven't seen a three-page letter the panel wanted to give them more than a month ago.
The five-member Cable Communications Advisory Commission, appointed by the mayor, advised against the deal in an Oct. 13 letter addressed to O'Malley and the council.
Yet council members said Tuesday that they never saw the letter or heard of the commission's opinion. They said commission members did not testify at an Oct. 13 council hearing at which the contract was discussed.
"This raises a lot of questions," said Councilman Keiffer J. Mitchell Jr., who learned of the letter Tuesday. "I would have liked to have had it at the hearings. The council needs to be aware of [the letter] and to look at it closely."
Comptroller Joan M. Pratt expressed concern that the commission's opinion was not introduced to the Board of Estimates last week, which approved the deal over her lone "no" vote.
"Why do we appoint a commission and then we don't listen to or follow their recommendations?" Pratt said. "They call this an open government, yet you have a [commission] that makes recommendations and it's not shared with the board and the administration ignores its opinions."
Michael Shea of Baltimore Grassroots Media, a public access advocacy group, said he heard that commission members "were asked not to testify" at the Oct. 13 council hearing.
Jonathan L. Shorr, the commission's president, declined to say why neither he nor members of his panel spoke at the council meeting.
Raquel Guillory, an O'Malley spokeswoman, said commission members were not discouraged from testifying or from submitting the letter into the record.
"We're not hiding anything," Guillory said.
Guillory said the mayor believed he had addressed the panel's concerns in amendments added to the contract last week that increased money for public access programming.
Shorr said in an interview Tuesday that problems remain.
In the letter, a copy of which was obtained Tuesday by The Sun , Shorr wrote that city government would improve its "long-term civic health" by encouraging participation in public access programming by neighborhood, educational and social groups.
"We urge you to ensure that in the pending franchise agreement, the city's priority is not the stockholders of Comcast but the citizens of Baltimore," wrote Shorr, a co-director of the University of Baltimore's school of communications design. "Until that time, we recommend that the council not approve this contract."
The franchise, which would begin Jan. 1, requires Comcast to pay the city 5 percent of the gross revenue generated from its nearly 120,000 city subscribers. The annual fee would generate about $4.3 million for the city's general fund. The deal would also provide other revenue for public access television.
Comcast officials have said repeatedly that the deal is fair to the city because the company is giving more than the 5 percent required by law.
The letter from the advisory panel spelled out seven points of concern. Chief among them were the city's willingness to give back four of its 12 channels reserved for programs produced by the public, educational institutions and government agencies.
That also runs counter to recommendations from a consultant hired by the city to assess Baltimore's cable needs. Virchow Krause & Co. recommended in July that the city negotiate to reserve more channels to meet increasing demand for local programming.
Councilman Robert W. Curran said he did not know of the letter. He said the city agreed to eight channels because only four of the 12 existing channels are now being used. Baltimore Grassroots Media has said the public cannot use more channels without public access studios, training and financing.
The advisory commission's letter also states that the city should have had Comcast set aside money for public access, rather than passing the cost on to subscribers. The letter says the city needs to improve its monitoring of complaints against the cable provider, a concern expressed by the city's consultant.
"The contract needs lots of work," Shorr wrote.
The council is scheduled to vote Thursday on moving the contract onto Monday's agenda. A final, third-reader vote would be scheduled for the council's Nov. 29 session, Curran said.
A point of contention is how much money would go toward public access and how that cash would be generated. Under the terms of the pending contract, Comcast agreed to charge each subscriber a $6 annual fee that would generate more than $700,000 a year for the capital costs of public access programming on cable Channel 5 and for shows produced by city government on cable Channel 21 and city schools on cable Channel 7.
Comcast would provide $570,000 over the next 12 years to provide public access training, plus $430,000 over the next six years toward a summer youth employment program that could be steered to public access programming.
Shorr said the minimum needed each year to staff a public access studio is about $225,000. He said none of the money from Comcast is designated for public access. Even if it were, he said, it would not be enough for a public access studio, training programs and equipment rental.
"The commission is trying to look out for the best interests of the citizens," Shorr said. "Comcast always holds the upper hand."
Copyright © 2004, The Baltimore Sun
* * *
Communiqué from Baltimore Grassroots Media:
Dear Citizens of Baltimore:
This Monday, December 6, 2004, the City Council is set to make their final vote on the proposed 12-year Comcast.
This new proposed contract does NOT protect public access television and the City Council needs to hear from you if public cable access is to be saved. Baltimore Grassroots Media is asking all those who care about public access television and who want it to survive to do the following:
Please join us this Monday at 5pm at the City Council meeting on the 4th floor of City Hall, 100 N. Holiday St., to show your support for postponing the final vote in order to help insure sufficient rights of public access. If we can turn out those who support postponement at this time, it will demonstrate to the Council at this crucial juncture that citizens of Baltimore care about proper procedure and public access issues.
Email, call and fax the City Council in support of postponing the pending final reader and vote on Bill # 04-0504 to allow for further scrutiny of it's provisions for public access.
The proposed Comcast Cable contract is deficient and must include the following:
1. Funding for public access operating expenses. The proposed contract includes some funds earmarked only for equipment and facilities, but none of this money can currently be used as written for operational expenses such as salaries and administrative costs.
2. A timetable and plan for the creation of the public access entity. Without solid deadlines for the formation of a Board and an organizational structure, a new public access organization could well languish for years in limbo.
3. A public access entity that has a democratically appointed board and is representative of the community. This Board needs to have members who represent all of the communities in Baltimore and who have a stake in the success of public access.
Thank you for taking these simple steps to save public access in Baltimore!
Please contact Baltimore Grassroots Media at info@baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org or at [410] 371-8218 for more information or to join in the struggle to preserve and enhance public access television in Baltimore City.
Amanda Bowers
Baltimore Grassroots Media
Please Visit:
www.baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org
Cable panel urged mayor
not to back Comcast deal
Panel advised O'Malley against cable deal;
officials say they didn't know
By Doug Donovan
Sun Staff
November 16, 2004
Mayor Martin O'Malley failed to follow the advice of his expert cable advisory panel when he pushed a new 12-year cable television deal with Comcast through the Board of Estimates.
And with the contract now awaiting City Council approval, council members say they still haven't seen a three-page letter the panel wanted to give them more than a month ago.
The five-member Cable Communications Advisory Commission, appointed by the mayor, advised against the deal in an Oct. 13 letter addressed to O'Malley and the council.
Yet council members said Tuesday that they never saw the letter or heard of the commission's opinion. They said commission members did not testify at an Oct. 13 council hearing at which the contract was discussed.
"This raises a lot of questions," said Councilman Keiffer J. Mitchell Jr., who learned of the letter Tuesday. "I would have liked to have had it at the hearings. The council needs to be aware of [the letter] and to look at it closely."
Comptroller Joan M. Pratt expressed concern that the commission's opinion was not introduced to the Board of Estimates last week, which approved the deal over her lone "no" vote.
"Why do we appoint a commission and then we don't listen to or follow their recommendations?" Pratt said. "They call this an open government, yet you have a [commission] that makes recommendations and it's not shared with the board and the administration ignores its opinions."
Michael Shea of Baltimore Grassroots Media, a public access advocacy group, said he heard that commission members "were asked not to testify" at the Oct. 13 council hearing.
Jonathan L. Shorr, the commission's president, declined to say why neither he nor members of his panel spoke at the council meeting.
Raquel Guillory, an O'Malley spokeswoman, said commission members were not discouraged from testifying or from submitting the letter into the record.
"We're not hiding anything," Guillory said.
Guillory said the mayor believed he had addressed the panel's concerns in amendments added to the contract last week that increased money for public access programming.
Shorr said in an interview Tuesday that problems remain.
In the letter, a copy of which was obtained Tuesday by The Sun , Shorr wrote that city government would improve its "long-term civic health" by encouraging participation in public access programming by neighborhood, educational and social groups.
"We urge you to ensure that in the pending franchise agreement, the city's priority is not the stockholders of Comcast but the citizens of Baltimore," wrote Shorr, a co-director of the University of Baltimore's school of communications design. "Until that time, we recommend that the council not approve this contract."
The franchise, which would begin Jan. 1, requires Comcast to pay the city 5 percent of the gross revenue generated from its nearly 120,000 city subscribers. The annual fee would generate about $4.3 million for the city's general fund. The deal would also provide other revenue for public access television.
Comcast officials have said repeatedly that the deal is fair to the city because the company is giving more than the 5 percent required by law.
The letter from the advisory panel spelled out seven points of concern. Chief among them were the city's willingness to give back four of its 12 channels reserved for programs produced by the public, educational institutions and government agencies.
That also runs counter to recommendations from a consultant hired by the city to assess Baltimore's cable needs. Virchow Krause & Co. recommended in July that the city negotiate to reserve more channels to meet increasing demand for local programming.
Councilman Robert W. Curran said he did not know of the letter. He said the city agreed to eight channels because only four of the 12 existing channels are now being used. Baltimore Grassroots Media has said the public cannot use more channels without public access studios, training and financing.
The advisory commission's letter also states that the city should have had Comcast set aside money for public access, rather than passing the cost on to subscribers. The letter says the city needs to improve its monitoring of complaints against the cable provider, a concern expressed by the city's consultant.
"The contract needs lots of work," Shorr wrote.
The council is scheduled to vote Thursday on moving the contract onto Monday's agenda. A final, third-reader vote would be scheduled for the council's Nov. 29 session, Curran said.
A point of contention is how much money would go toward public access and how that cash would be generated. Under the terms of the pending contract, Comcast agreed to charge each subscriber a $6 annual fee that would generate more than $700,000 a year for the capital costs of public access programming on cable Channel 5 and for shows produced by city government on cable Channel 21 and city schools on cable Channel 7.
Comcast would provide $570,000 over the next 12 years to provide public access training, plus $430,000 over the next six years toward a summer youth employment program that could be steered to public access programming.
Shorr said the minimum needed each year to staff a public access studio is about $225,000. He said none of the money from Comcast is designated for public access. Even if it were, he said, it would not be enough for a public access studio, training programs and equipment rental.
"The commission is trying to look out for the best interests of the citizens," Shorr said. "Comcast always holds the upper hand."
Copyright © 2004, The Baltimore Sun
* * *
Communiqué from Baltimore Grassroots Media:
Dear Citizens of Baltimore:
This Monday, December 6, 2004, the City Council is set to make their final vote on the proposed 12-year Comcast.
This new proposed contract does NOT protect public access television and the City Council needs to hear from you if public cable access is to be saved. Baltimore Grassroots Media is asking all those who care about public access television and who want it to survive to do the following:
Please join us this Monday at 5pm at the City Council meeting on the 4th floor of City Hall, 100 N. Holiday St., to show your support for postponing the final vote in order to help insure sufficient rights of public access. If we can turn out those who support postponement at this time, it will demonstrate to the Council at this crucial juncture that citizens of Baltimore care about proper procedure and public access issues.
Email, call and fax the City Council in support of postponing the pending final reader and vote on Bill # 04-0504 to allow for further scrutiny of it's provisions for public access.
The proposed Comcast Cable contract is deficient and must include the following:
1. Funding for public access operating expenses. The proposed contract includes some funds earmarked only for equipment and facilities, but none of this money can currently be used as written for operational expenses such as salaries and administrative costs.
2. A timetable and plan for the creation of the public access entity. Without solid deadlines for the formation of a Board and an organizational structure, a new public access organization could well languish for years in limbo.
3. A public access entity that has a democratically appointed board and is representative of the community. This Board needs to have members who represent all of the communities in Baltimore and who have a stake in the success of public access.
Thank you for taking these simple steps to save public access in Baltimore!
Please contact Baltimore Grassroots Media at info@baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org or at [410] 371-8218 for more information or to join in the struggle to preserve and enhance public access television in Baltimore City.
Amanda Bowers
Baltimore Grassroots Media
Please Visit:
www.baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org
BLOWING A WHISTLE
December 4, 2004
Dear Patrons,
Our primary roll in operating The Senator Theatre and The Rotunda Cinematheque is to entertain and enlighten our patrons by presenting films and producing special events and programs. In this way our role is aligned with the regional cable systems that aspire to serve their subscribers in a similar fashion.
Over the years our audience has grown and our theatres have become regional points of destination, but our primary patron base remains the citizens of Baltimore City.
Although our weekly e-mails now go out to over 10,000 recipients, this specific communication is only relevant to the residents of Baltimore City and we regret that others who do not live in Baltimore will receive it as well. If you are not a Baltimore City resident, please forgive the intrusion.
BLOWING A WHISTLE
An alarming series of events have been taking place in the last few weeks regarding the unusual and inexplicable rush by the Mayor's office and the City Council to ratify the controversial new Comcast Cable contract, which, as proposed, will remain in effect for the next 12 years.
We are taking the unusual action of informing our e-mail listmembers about this issue in an 11th hour effort to inform you and shed much needed light on some very troubling aspects of what is taking place.
On the schedule of this Monday's final meeting of the current Baltimore City Council is the third reader and final vote on Bill # 04-1504, which if passed as expected, will ratify Baltimore's City's extensively flawed Comcast Cable franchise contract.
Ratification of this Comcast Cable contract is predicted to occur this Monday evening despite the fact that the controversial Comcast Cable franchise contract is considered deficient and problematic by many informed groups and individuals with the most auspicious negative assessment coming directly from the Mayor's Baltimore Cable Communications Advisory Commission.
The Mayor's Cable Communications Advisory Commission was appointed by Mayor O'Malley and was mandated to review and evaluate the new contract, and the desirability and fairness of the exclusive deal it represents. When recently announcing the commission's conclusions and recommendations the president of the Cable Communications Advisory Commission, Jonathan Shorr, was highly critical of the contract.
[The eye opening recent Sunpaper article on these matters is included in its entirety below].
Irregardless of the clear negative assessment of the new contract by the Mayor's Cable Communications Advisory Commission, and the alarming testimony before the City Council by the informed citizen action group Baltimore Grassroots Media and others, the outgoing City Council is rushing headlong this Monday night to the 3rd reader to be followed by the final vote. They are doing this over the fervent and rising objections of those who are bewildered and becoming suspicious over this series of events.
In response to this situation, we feel compelled to transmit this atypical communiqué to the public and do what we can at this point in time to inform you of what is taking place. We urge you to expeditiously add your voice to the rising chorus of concerned citizens who want to know what the rush is all about and why the outgoing City Council is being so derelict in not properly representing us by more vigorously scrutinizing this whole matter.
We cannot comprehend why there is such a rush to vote this apparently flawed piece of crucial legislation into law, particularly since the newly elected and revamped Baltimore City Council will very soon begin its new session. All of Baltimore's citizens may soon be subject to the poorly negotiated terms of this new contract for the next 12 years.
Why the rush? Why are the citizen action groups being given no credence? Why are the Mayor and City Council ignoring the unequivocal negative assessment of the Mayor's own appointed Cable Communications Advisory Commission?
If you agree with the assessment that this is all very alarming please try and attend this Monday evening's council session. We also urge you to utilize the convenient method we have provided [at the very bottom of this e-mail] to help you contact your current Baltimore City Council representatives this Monday the 6th by e-mail or fax. Please let them know of your concern over the propriety of what is occurring in regards to the Comcast Cable franchise contract.
The Baltimore Grassroots Media organization has provided us pertinent information also included below. For further information, please visit their website at www.baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org to learn more about these issues.
Hopefully with your input, passage of this important legislation will be postponed from occurring this Monday evening. This will permit the newly elected incoming Council an opportunity to exercise further scrutiny over these matters as they were recently elected to do.
If despite all of our best efforts, Bill # 04-1504 passes this Monday evening, we will continue to advocate for public scrutiny of a cable contract process that seems to have taken on a confounding life of its own. If need be, both The Senator Theatre and The Rotunda Cinematheque will be available to raise public awareness and funds to help evaluate the potential for legal challenges to these egregious violations of procedure and the trust we place in our public officials.
Sincerely,
Tom Kiefaber
Dear Patrons,
Our primary roll in operating The Senator Theatre and The Rotunda Cinematheque is to entertain and enlighten our patrons by presenting films and producing special events and programs. In this way our role is aligned with the regional cable systems that aspire to serve their subscribers in a similar fashion.
Over the years our audience has grown and our theatres have become regional points of destination, but our primary patron base remains the citizens of Baltimore City.
Although our weekly e-mails now go out to over 10,000 recipients, this specific communication is only relevant to the residents of Baltimore City and we regret that others who do not live in Baltimore will receive it as well. If you are not a Baltimore City resident, please forgive the intrusion.
BLOWING A WHISTLE
An alarming series of events have been taking place in the last few weeks regarding the unusual and inexplicable rush by the Mayor's office and the City Council to ratify the controversial new Comcast Cable contract, which, as proposed, will remain in effect for the next 12 years.
We are taking the unusual action of informing our e-mail listmembers about this issue in an 11th hour effort to inform you and shed much needed light on some very troubling aspects of what is taking place.
On the schedule of this Monday's final meeting of the current Baltimore City Council is the third reader and final vote on Bill # 04-1504, which if passed as expected, will ratify Baltimore's City's extensively flawed Comcast Cable franchise contract.
Ratification of this Comcast Cable contract is predicted to occur this Monday evening despite the fact that the controversial Comcast Cable franchise contract is considered deficient and problematic by many informed groups and individuals with the most auspicious negative assessment coming directly from the Mayor's Baltimore Cable Communications Advisory Commission.
The Mayor's Cable Communications Advisory Commission was appointed by Mayor O'Malley and was mandated to review and evaluate the new contract, and the desirability and fairness of the exclusive deal it represents. When recently announcing the commission's conclusions and recommendations the president of the Cable Communications Advisory Commission, Jonathan Shorr, was highly critical of the contract.
[The eye opening recent Sunpaper article on these matters is included in its entirety below].
Irregardless of the clear negative assessment of the new contract by the Mayor's Cable Communications Advisory Commission, and the alarming testimony before the City Council by the informed citizen action group Baltimore Grassroots Media and others, the outgoing City Council is rushing headlong this Monday night to the 3rd reader to be followed by the final vote. They are doing this over the fervent and rising objections of those who are bewildered and becoming suspicious over this series of events.
In response to this situation, we feel compelled to transmit this atypical communiqué to the public and do what we can at this point in time to inform you of what is taking place. We urge you to expeditiously add your voice to the rising chorus of concerned citizens who want to know what the rush is all about and why the outgoing City Council is being so derelict in not properly representing us by more vigorously scrutinizing this whole matter.
We cannot comprehend why there is such a rush to vote this apparently flawed piece of crucial legislation into law, particularly since the newly elected and revamped Baltimore City Council will very soon begin its new session. All of Baltimore's citizens may soon be subject to the poorly negotiated terms of this new contract for the next 12 years.
Why the rush? Why are the citizen action groups being given no credence? Why are the Mayor and City Council ignoring the unequivocal negative assessment of the Mayor's own appointed Cable Communications Advisory Commission?
If you agree with the assessment that this is all very alarming please try and attend this Monday evening's council session. We also urge you to utilize the convenient method we have provided [at the very bottom of this e-mail] to help you contact your current Baltimore City Council representatives this Monday the 6th by e-mail or fax. Please let them know of your concern over the propriety of what is occurring in regards to the Comcast Cable franchise contract.
The Baltimore Grassroots Media organization has provided us pertinent information also included below. For further information, please visit their website at www.baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org to learn more about these issues.
Hopefully with your input, passage of this important legislation will be postponed from occurring this Monday evening. This will permit the newly elected incoming Council an opportunity to exercise further scrutiny over these matters as they were recently elected to do.
If despite all of our best efforts, Bill # 04-1504 passes this Monday evening, we will continue to advocate for public scrutiny of a cable contract process that seems to have taken on a confounding life of its own. If need be, both The Senator Theatre and The Rotunda Cinematheque will be available to raise public awareness and funds to help evaluate the potential for legal challenges to these egregious violations of procedure and the trust we place in our public officials.
Sincerely,
Tom Kiefaber
Public Demands More Scrutiny, Delay of Proposed Comcast Deal
Subject: [BGM] PRESS ADVISORY: Public Demands More Scrutiny, Delay of Proposed Comcast Deal
Baltimore Grassroots Media
www.baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org
News Release: December 6, 2004
For more information contact:
Amanda Bowers: (410) 371-8218
Mike Shea: (410) 523-0212
Public Demands More Scrutiny, Delay of Proposed Comcast Deal
Council poised to lock City into a 12-year contract that needs more work, according to Mayor’s Cable Commission and other experts
BALTIMORE – Today at 5 PM the City Council is scheduled to take its final vote on the Comcast cable contract, Bill 04-1504. Community television supporters and cable experts say that the vote should be delayed as there are critical problems with the proposed contract that have not been addressed. Baltimore Grassroots Media (BGM) and other community television supporters plan to attend tonight’s Council meeting to show their opposition to the contract and to press for a delay to the vote.
Mayor Martin O’Malley’s own Cable Advisory Commission has gone on record as opposing the contract. In an Oct. 13th letter that was addressed to both the Mayor and the Council, the Commission wrote, "We urge you to ensure that in the pending franchise agreement, the city's priority is not the stockholders of Comcast but the citizens of Baltimore. Until that time, we recommend that the council not approve this contract." The letter also raises concerns about the return of 4 of the 12 channels currently designated for public, educational and governmental (PEG) programming to Comcast, which, according to calculations made by BGM based on figures given by Comcast, are worth approximately $77 million over the term of the twelve-year agreement.
BGM has raised concerns about side agreements that are not a part of the main body of the contract that are supposed to provide funding for public access. On Friday, Dec. 3, the group received, for the first time, the text of a side agreement between the city and Comcast for a $570,000 training grant, the source of promised public access operating funds. The document is pre-dated December 6, 2004 and has not been signed. The agreement letter does not indicate that the $570,000 will go directly to public access television, only that it will go to the City, where it could be used for any of the PEG channels, including government Channel 21.
Channel 21 had an annual budget of $1.7 million last year; currently public access Channel 5 has no operating funds and is run out of the Mayor’s Office of Cable and Communications.
The City Council claims it is also securing an additional $430,000 from the City coffers for public access in the form of a memorandum of understanding from the Department of Finance. At the Nov. 29th City Council meeting President Dixon and Councilman Curran motioned to delay final passage of the contract until this MOU could be finalized. BGM says it has not seen this document and asserts that the final vote should be delayed until this side agreement can be scrutinized by the public.
On Friday night, Dec 3rd, BGM held a public forum on the public access situation in Baltimore. In attendance were several experts on public access from around the country who are submitting a letter today to City Council President Sheila Dixon to urge her to delay the final vote. They are Richard Turner, Executive Director of Montgomery Community Television, Anthony Riddle, Executive Director of the Alliance for Community Media, and Steve Ranieri, Executive Director of Community Cable Channel 27 TV in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Also in attendance was Tom Kiefaber, owner of the Senator Theatre, who has placed a message on the marquee of the theater that reads, “STOP THE COMCAST CABLE CONTRACT! BILL 04-1504 NEEDS PUBLIC SCRUTINY. CONTACT YOUR CITY COUNCIL PERSON.”
Baltimore Grassroots Media is a group made up of public access television producers, former public access Channel 5 volunteers, and other concerned citizens who are working to bring public access back to Baltimore and to help it thrive. For more information please go to: www.baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org.
Baltimore Grassroots Media
www.baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org
News Release: December 6, 2004
For more information contact:
Amanda Bowers: (410) 371-8218
Mike Shea: (410) 523-0212
Public Demands More Scrutiny, Delay of Proposed Comcast Deal
Council poised to lock City into a 12-year contract that needs more work, according to Mayor’s Cable Commission and other experts
BALTIMORE – Today at 5 PM the City Council is scheduled to take its final vote on the Comcast cable contract, Bill 04-1504. Community television supporters and cable experts say that the vote should be delayed as there are critical problems with the proposed contract that have not been addressed. Baltimore Grassroots Media (BGM) and other community television supporters plan to attend tonight’s Council meeting to show their opposition to the contract and to press for a delay to the vote.
Mayor Martin O’Malley’s own Cable Advisory Commission has gone on record as opposing the contract. In an Oct. 13th letter that was addressed to both the Mayor and the Council, the Commission wrote, "We urge you to ensure that in the pending franchise agreement, the city's priority is not the stockholders of Comcast but the citizens of Baltimore. Until that time, we recommend that the council not approve this contract." The letter also raises concerns about the return of 4 of the 12 channels currently designated for public, educational and governmental (PEG) programming to Comcast, which, according to calculations made by BGM based on figures given by Comcast, are worth approximately $77 million over the term of the twelve-year agreement.
BGM has raised concerns about side agreements that are not a part of the main body of the contract that are supposed to provide funding for public access. On Friday, Dec. 3, the group received, for the first time, the text of a side agreement between the city and Comcast for a $570,000 training grant, the source of promised public access operating funds. The document is pre-dated December 6, 2004 and has not been signed. The agreement letter does not indicate that the $570,000 will go directly to public access television, only that it will go to the City, where it could be used for any of the PEG channels, including government Channel 21.
Channel 21 had an annual budget of $1.7 million last year; currently public access Channel 5 has no operating funds and is run out of the Mayor’s Office of Cable and Communications.
The City Council claims it is also securing an additional $430,000 from the City coffers for public access in the form of a memorandum of understanding from the Department of Finance. At the Nov. 29th City Council meeting President Dixon and Councilman Curran motioned to delay final passage of the contract until this MOU could be finalized. BGM says it has not seen this document and asserts that the final vote should be delayed until this side agreement can be scrutinized by the public.
On Friday night, Dec 3rd, BGM held a public forum on the public access situation in Baltimore. In attendance were several experts on public access from around the country who are submitting a letter today to City Council President Sheila Dixon to urge her to delay the final vote. They are Richard Turner, Executive Director of Montgomery Community Television, Anthony Riddle, Executive Director of the Alliance for Community Media, and Steve Ranieri, Executive Director of Community Cable Channel 27 TV in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Also in attendance was Tom Kiefaber, owner of the Senator Theatre, who has placed a message on the marquee of the theater that reads, “STOP THE COMCAST CABLE CONTRACT! BILL 04-1504 NEEDS PUBLIC SCRUTINY. CONTACT YOUR CITY COUNCIL PERSON.”
Baltimore Grassroots Media is a group made up of public access television producers, former public access Channel 5 volunteers, and other concerned citizens who are working to bring public access back to Baltimore and to help it thrive. For more information please go to: www.baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org.
Thursday, December 02, 2004
AN OPEN LETTER TO MY BALTIMORE COMMUNITY
Date: Thu, 02 Dec 2004 02:24:56 -0500
From: JohnDeSantis@PublicAndPrivateEnterprise.org
To: bgm@epistolary.org
Subject: [BGM] AN OPEN LETTER TO MY BALTIMORE COMMUNITY
Dear Fellow BGM List Members:
I want you all to know that I speak of public access TV and BGM in a
major project endeavor within my main mission in life that began a
little after midnight tonight -- the start of a long-term e-mailing
campaign. Where I speak of this is in three paragraphs near the top of
the page on my web site that the link at the end of this invitational
letter that I began to mail out tonight guides people to. I send a copy
of the same letter that you see just below to only one e-mail address
each time, and do my best to try and personalize each one.--John.
=====================================
Dear [the recipient]:
This is an invitation for you to go to my web site and read the "OPEN
LETTER TO MY BALTIMORE COMMUNITY" -- which is my announcement to
everyone about Baltimore being at the center of a new worldwide project
to help all of humanity. It's about creating a new long-term worldwide
forum for every nation to be involved with -- in order to work on the
subject of creating economic success and eliminating poverty throughout
the world. The link to the letter is at the end of this invitation.
The "Open Letter" contains two sections: The introductory remarks
followed by the information concerning a total of $10,000 in PRIZES (1st
place: $5,000 -- 2nd place: $3,000 -- 3rd place: $2,000) that are now
available to win by high school, college, and university students who
take part in a creative contest to help get this Movement going -- as
well as to inspire and motivate many people and organizations to get
involved and help promote, guide, and lead the project itself.
The overall contest goal is basically 3-fold:
(1) To rewrite, rearrange, reorganize, and completely redo my amateur
web site -- turning it into something very professional and inspiring
for the Movement.
(2) To create the contents of all of the professional and inspiring
promotional items such as flyers, brochures, letters, press releases,
advertisements, and so on that will be necessary.
(3) To creatively organize and figure out how to get the first actual
forum going along with the procedure for it. This would include how to
go about it, how to invite people from all nations to it by contacting
their Washington D.C. embassies and consulates (as well as any
consulates that are located in Baltimore), asking them to send people to
the first forum, which is to be held in some large auditorium in
Baltimore that is donated to be used. Inviting the general public,
business people, politicians, media people, U.N. people and U.N.
organizations, scholars, non-profit and religious organizations, and
local dignitaries from all walks of life is also included.
I thank you in advance for reading and considering the "Open Letter" to
everyone in my Baltimore community that is found in this link -- which
you can either copy and paste or click on to get to:
http://www.PublicAndPrivateEnterprise.org/MyCommunity.html
Most Sincerely,
John DeSantis
-------
From: JohnDeSantis@PublicAndPrivateEnterprise.org
To: bgm@epistolary.org
Subject: [BGM] AN OPEN LETTER TO MY BALTIMORE COMMUNITY
Dear Fellow BGM List Members:
I want you all to know that I speak of public access TV and BGM in a
major project endeavor within my main mission in life that began a
little after midnight tonight -- the start of a long-term e-mailing
campaign. Where I speak of this is in three paragraphs near the top of
the page on my web site that the link at the end of this invitational
letter that I began to mail out tonight guides people to. I send a copy
of the same letter that you see just below to only one e-mail address
each time, and do my best to try and personalize each one.--John.
=====================================
Dear [the recipient]:
This is an invitation for you to go to my web site and read the "OPEN
LETTER TO MY BALTIMORE COMMUNITY" -- which is my announcement to
everyone about Baltimore being at the center of a new worldwide project
to help all of humanity. It's about creating a new long-term worldwide
forum for every nation to be involved with -- in order to work on the
subject of creating economic success and eliminating poverty throughout
the world. The link to the letter is at the end of this invitation.
The "Open Letter" contains two sections: The introductory remarks
followed by the information concerning a total of $10,000 in PRIZES (1st
place: $5,000 -- 2nd place: $3,000 -- 3rd place: $2,000) that are now
available to win by high school, college, and university students who
take part in a creative contest to help get this Movement going -- as
well as to inspire and motivate many people and organizations to get
involved and help promote, guide, and lead the project itself.
The overall contest goal is basically 3-fold:
(1) To rewrite, rearrange, reorganize, and completely redo my amateur
web site -- turning it into something very professional and inspiring
for the Movement.
(2) To create the contents of all of the professional and inspiring
promotional items such as flyers, brochures, letters, press releases,
advertisements, and so on that will be necessary.
(3) To creatively organize and figure out how to get the first actual
forum going along with the procedure for it. This would include how to
go about it, how to invite people from all nations to it by contacting
their Washington D.C. embassies and consulates (as well as any
consulates that are located in Baltimore), asking them to send people to
the first forum, which is to be held in some large auditorium in
Baltimore that is donated to be used. Inviting the general public,
business people, politicians, media people, U.N. people and U.N.
organizations, scholars, non-profit and religious organizations, and
local dignitaries from all walks of life is also included.
I thank you in advance for reading and considering the "Open Letter" to
everyone in my Baltimore community that is found in this link -- which
you can either copy and paste or click on to get to:
http://www.PublicAndPrivateEnterprise.org/MyCommunity.html
Most Sincerely,
John DeSantis
-------
Wednesday, December 01, 2004
Friday - Baltimore Public Access Forum (12/3), Red Emma's 800 St. Paul Street
Friday - Baltimore Public Access Forum (12/3)
This Friday (12/3) representatives from Baltimore Grassroots Media will appear at Red Emma's to discuss the importance of Public Access and the current struggle to preserve it for Baltimore. This forum comes at a crucial time. The Baltimore City Council is believed to be only days away from approving a new contract that will eliminate Baltimore Public Access by removing it's funding, allocating the local cable spectrum entirely to Comcast in the process.
Labor, peace and social justice activists (of all stripes) who are interested in learning what strategies are being utilized in order to preserve this vital outlet for community-based media are encouraged to attend this timely forum and participate in the discussion.
Date: 12/3/04
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Est. duration: 2 hours.
Cost: Free!
Contact: Kelly, 240-441-0898
http://www.baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org
Red Emma's
800 St. Paul Street
410-230-0450
http://www.RedEmmas.org
Public Access Forum (12/3) Agenda:
Opening Comments: Presenter - Kelly E. Crawford
Past History of Public Access:
Presenters: Mike Shea and Gene Balbierz
Public Access - Present Day Use:
Roundtable Discussion
Presenters: Jim George, Joan Floyd
Future of Public Access:
Video from Greg Whitehair
Baltimore Grassroots Media Business Plan
Conclusion:
Questions and Answer Session
OP/ED by John Desantis
This Friday (12/3) representatives from Baltimore Grassroots Media will appear at Red Emma's to discuss the importance of Public Access and the current struggle to preserve it for Baltimore. This forum comes at a crucial time. The Baltimore City Council is believed to be only days away from approving a new contract that will eliminate Baltimore Public Access by removing it's funding, allocating the local cable spectrum entirely to Comcast in the process.
Labor, peace and social justice activists (of all stripes) who are interested in learning what strategies are being utilized in order to preserve this vital outlet for community-based media are encouraged to attend this timely forum and participate in the discussion.
Date: 12/3/04
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Est. duration: 2 hours.
Cost: Free!
Contact: Kelly, 240-441-0898
http://www.baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org
Red Emma's
800 St. Paul Street
410-230-0450
http://www.RedEmmas.org
Public Access Forum (12/3) Agenda:
Opening Comments: Presenter - Kelly E. Crawford
Past History of Public Access:
Presenters: Mike Shea and Gene Balbierz
Public Access - Present Day Use:
Roundtable Discussion
Presenters: Jim George, Joan Floyd
Future of Public Access:
Video from Greg Whitehair
Baltimore Grassroots Media Business Plan
Conclusion:
Questions and Answer Session
OP/ED by John Desantis
Tuesday, November 30, 2004
Public Access presentation informing the public on what Public Access is and why it is vital, Friday, December 3, 2004 at 7:00 p.m. 1.5 hours
Hello All --
Red Emma's (800 St. Paul Street) has invited Baltimore Grassroots Media to make a 1.5 hour Public Access presentation informing the public on what Public Access is and why it is vital. BGM will present on Friday, December 3, 2004 at 7:00 p.m. The presentation will be short and to the point. We will be brainstorming during our weekly meeting this evening at Unity United Methodist Church on 1433 Edmondson Avenue. Please attend the meeting and present any ideas you have. Also, if you want to lecture, please feel free to be part of the agenda for the presentation.
Thanks,
Kelly
Red Emma's (800 St. Paul Street) has invited Baltimore Grassroots Media to make a 1.5 hour Public Access presentation informing the public on what Public Access is and why it is vital. BGM will present on Friday, December 3, 2004 at 7:00 p.m. The presentation will be short and to the point. We will be brainstorming during our weekly meeting this evening at Unity United Methodist Church on 1433 Edmondson Avenue. Please attend the meeting and present any ideas you have. Also, if you want to lecture, please feel free to be part of the agenda for the presentation.
Thanks,
Kelly
Wednesday, November 24, 2004
Subject: [BPATV5] Re: PUBLIC ACCESS BELONGS TO ALL OF US CONCERNED CITIZENS OF BALTIMORE JOIN US
From: "Loretto Gubernatis"
Date: Tue, 23 Nov 2004 17:13:30 -0500
Subject: [BPATV5] Re: PUBLIC ACCESS BELONGS TO ALL OF US CONCERNED CITIZENS OF BALTIMORE JOIN US
Update for next meeting. December 15th, at JHU Conference Room 10 N. Charles Street at 6:30 please call so we know how many people to accommodate.
Call Pro. Petersen at 410-516-2825 or Loretto Gubernatis at 410-732-8263
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN,
The group tentatively titled Concerned Citizens of Baltimore met for the first time on November 10th, 2004 at 6:30 at the great Blacks In Wax Mansion at 1601 North Ave. Present were the following; Dr. Joanne Martin, Loretto Gubernatis, Shawnte Campbell, James Brumfield, Dave McDuffie, Robert Lighty, Louis Gubernatis, and John Carrington.
It was decided that we would nominate an interim board to move along the process of incorporation. We decided to be a not for profit organization and operate in the democratic manner of election etc. Interim Officers elected were Loretto Gubernatis for President, Dr. Joanne Martin for Vice President, Shawnte Campbell for Secretary, Margaret Locklear for Treasurer and Dave McDuffie as Assistant Treasurer.
A committee was formed to draw up the by-laws. They are; James Brumfield, Louis Gubernatis and Dave McDuffie. They will report their progress at the next meeting. John Carrington will be temporarily in charge of Membership and will draw up Membership application form. Robert Lighty who is in Property Management will investigate possible other sites to house the organization and for meetings. It was decided that we would meet again on December 15th at the same time and location.
We decided to form an Advisory Board who will lend their name and support to our efforts but will not be required to come to every meeting or chair committee’s. Our Advisory Board so far are; Rebecca Hoffberger, A. Dwight Pettit, Dr. Marie Washington, Mary Pat Clarke, Zoh Meyerhoff Hieronimus, Camay Murphy, Catherine Pugh, Nancy Hinds, Pro. Peter Petersen, Bruce Jennings and Tom Saunders.
We do not in any way say that we represent Public Access Channel Five. We have come together for the purpose of assisting in any way the Mayor’s Office and the City Council in doing what is best for the future of Public Access. We would like to be the voice of reason in what seems a cacophony of confusion. It is in harmony and blending that the best music is experienced.
We wish to attest that our dealings (and among us are those who are producers for public access channel five) with MOCC has always been amicable, respectful and we appreciate greatly the efforts that Marilyn Harris Davis has gone to keep Public Access Channel Five Alive and operative during these last few years of turmoil. We feel she is dedicated to the cause of Public Access Channel Five and Baltimore. A truly concerned citizen. If the Mayor’s Office is interested in any of our group sitting on the board that is being formed by MOCC we would be honored to assist.
MISSION STATEMENT
This organization should work for the people of Baltimore and should represent the majority that are not being properly represented by public access at present, that is; children, teens, seniors, women and minorities. It is our goal to enable those who would like to have a voice to get their productions in proper form to be aired on Public Access. We plan to conduct workshops and seminars to encourage the development of a strong Television Industry here in Baltimore. We will charge a membership fee to those who can afford it. We will raise money from two events planned each year. If you would like to join us or support us in anyway please contact us. Or if you know anyone who you feel would be interested in joining us please pass on the information. We have tentatively titled this group Concerned Citizens for Quality Programming in Baltimore.
Here is the list of people who are interested in our group.
Loretto Gubernatis for McDonagh Davis Associates
Nancy Hinds Currently at BOPA, formerly 15 years with Channel 2 news
A. Dwight Pettit lawyer
Dr. Joanne Martin CEO The National Great Blacks in Wax Museum
Rebecca Hoffberger The Visionary Arts Museum
John Carrington Maryland Fun Time for Clear Channel
Shawnte Campbell for Soul Searching Productions
Camay Murphy Eubie Blake Cultural Center
Tom Reyes musician and contact for the arts and minorities
Zoh Meyerhoff Hieronimus Television producer
Dr Marie Washington Board of GBW
Tom Saunders Renaissance Production and city communications commission
Margaret Locklear Arena Players and Board of Fells Point Corner Theater
Professor Pete Petersen, Business Administration JHU, author Great Baltimore Fire
Catherine Pugh for Sister to Sister
Gennine Disviscour Md Historical Society
Christy Hallford Md Historical Society
Marks Chowing Ex Director the Hippodrome
Mary Pat Clarke
Robert Lighty Property Management
Jackie Washington Great Blacks In Wax
Travis Hensen from Great Blacks In Wax
Aaron Androh
Dave McDuffie Economics and Arts Administration
Michelle Sharp from Great Blacks In Wax
James Brumfield Realtor Long and Foster
Melissa De Board Director Top of the World
Marilyn Waranch Clear Channel
Danise Dorsey Jones
Bruce Jennings
Ruby Glover
J. B. Hanson
Janet Caslow Meals On Wheels
Jennifer Summers House of Ruth
Maureen Bryant Children's Advocacy Group
Tod Hotchkeppel television director, videographer..
Sophia Lynn
Loretto Gubernatis
410-732-8263
Please list any names you think might be interested and contact information and I will call them.
Date: Tue, 23 Nov 2004 17:13:30 -0500
Subject: [BPATV5] Re: PUBLIC ACCESS BELONGS TO ALL OF US CONCERNED CITIZENS OF BALTIMORE JOIN US
Update for next meeting. December 15th, at JHU Conference Room 10 N. Charles Street at 6:30 please call so we know how many people to accommodate.
Call Pro. Petersen at 410-516-2825 or Loretto Gubernatis at 410-732-8263
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN,
The group tentatively titled Concerned Citizens of Baltimore met for the first time on November 10th, 2004 at 6:30 at the great Blacks In Wax Mansion at 1601 North Ave. Present were the following; Dr. Joanne Martin, Loretto Gubernatis, Shawnte Campbell, James Brumfield, Dave McDuffie, Robert Lighty, Louis Gubernatis, and John Carrington.
It was decided that we would nominate an interim board to move along the process of incorporation. We decided to be a not for profit organization and operate in the democratic manner of election etc. Interim Officers elected were Loretto Gubernatis for President, Dr. Joanne Martin for Vice President, Shawnte Campbell for Secretary, Margaret Locklear for Treasurer and Dave McDuffie as Assistant Treasurer.
A committee was formed to draw up the by-laws. They are; James Brumfield, Louis Gubernatis and Dave McDuffie. They will report their progress at the next meeting. John Carrington will be temporarily in charge of Membership and will draw up Membership application form. Robert Lighty who is in Property Management will investigate possible other sites to house the organization and for meetings. It was decided that we would meet again on December 15th at the same time and location.
We decided to form an Advisory Board who will lend their name and support to our efforts but will not be required to come to every meeting or chair committee’s. Our Advisory Board so far are; Rebecca Hoffberger, A. Dwight Pettit, Dr. Marie Washington, Mary Pat Clarke, Zoh Meyerhoff Hieronimus, Camay Murphy, Catherine Pugh, Nancy Hinds, Pro. Peter Petersen, Bruce Jennings and Tom Saunders.
We do not in any way say that we represent Public Access Channel Five. We have come together for the purpose of assisting in any way the Mayor’s Office and the City Council in doing what is best for the future of Public Access. We would like to be the voice of reason in what seems a cacophony of confusion. It is in harmony and blending that the best music is experienced.
We wish to attest that our dealings (and among us are those who are producers for public access channel five) with MOCC has always been amicable, respectful and we appreciate greatly the efforts that Marilyn Harris Davis has gone to keep Public Access Channel Five Alive and operative during these last few years of turmoil. We feel she is dedicated to the cause of Public Access Channel Five and Baltimore. A truly concerned citizen. If the Mayor’s Office is interested in any of our group sitting on the board that is being formed by MOCC we would be honored to assist.
MISSION STATEMENT
This organization should work for the people of Baltimore and should represent the majority that are not being properly represented by public access at present, that is; children, teens, seniors, women and minorities. It is our goal to enable those who would like to have a voice to get their productions in proper form to be aired on Public Access. We plan to conduct workshops and seminars to encourage the development of a strong Television Industry here in Baltimore. We will charge a membership fee to those who can afford it. We will raise money from two events planned each year. If you would like to join us or support us in anyway please contact us. Or if you know anyone who you feel would be interested in joining us please pass on the information. We have tentatively titled this group Concerned Citizens for Quality Programming in Baltimore.
Here is the list of people who are interested in our group.
Loretto Gubernatis for McDonagh Davis Associates
Nancy Hinds Currently at BOPA, formerly 15 years with Channel 2 news
A. Dwight Pettit lawyer
Dr. Joanne Martin CEO The National Great Blacks in Wax Museum
Rebecca Hoffberger The Visionary Arts Museum
John Carrington Maryland Fun Time for Clear Channel
Shawnte Campbell for Soul Searching Productions
Camay Murphy Eubie Blake Cultural Center
Tom Reyes musician and contact for the arts and minorities
Zoh Meyerhoff Hieronimus Television producer
Dr Marie Washington Board of GBW
Tom Saunders Renaissance Production and city communications commission
Margaret Locklear Arena Players and Board of Fells Point Corner Theater
Professor Pete Petersen, Business Administration JHU, author Great Baltimore Fire
Catherine Pugh for Sister to Sister
Gennine Disviscour Md Historical Society
Christy Hallford Md Historical Society
Marks Chowing Ex Director the Hippodrome
Mary Pat Clarke
Robert Lighty Property Management
Jackie Washington Great Blacks In Wax
Travis Hensen from Great Blacks In Wax
Aaron Androh
Dave McDuffie Economics and Arts Administration
Michelle Sharp from Great Blacks In Wax
James Brumfield Realtor Long and Foster
Melissa De Board Director Top of the World
Marilyn Waranch Clear Channel
Danise Dorsey Jones
Bruce Jennings
Ruby Glover
J. B. Hanson
Janet Caslow Meals On Wheels
Jennifer Summers House of Ruth
Maureen Bryant Children's Advocacy Group
Tod Hotchkeppel television director, videographer..
Sophia Lynn
Loretto Gubernatis
410-732-8263
Please list any names you think might be interested and contact information and I will call them.
Tuesday, November 23, 2004
Hopefully rich people and charitable foundations will fund public access TV in Baltimore
Dear Editor,
Here is my personal information, and my "Letter to the Editor".
John DeSantis
1113 Scotts Hill Drive
Baltimore, MD 21208
Please know that my address is in Pikesville.
I'm retired. My home number is:
(410) 484-1987
I'm a volunteer with Baltimore Grassroots Media (BGM).
========================================
Hopefully rich people and charitable foundations will fund public access TV in Baltimore
"O'Malley says Comcast agreement was best deal city could negotiate" (title of Nov. 18 article). It was also spoken of in this way by Council members during the City Council session on the 22nd, where it was approved and moved forward for the final vote on the 29th. Based on all that I have heard at the various Board of Estimates and City Council sessions, it's obvious that Comcast has won the day to inadequately fund public access TV in Baltimore in this new 12-year contract, which activity will probably take a few years to even get started in a small way. Because of this it's time for rich citizens in the city and region to consider saving the day and step up to the plate and donate one, two, or three million dollars a year, to be added to the meager funding otherwise provided by Comcast, and make, once and for all, public access TV a super-duper operation and activity for the citizens of Baltimore to use and express themselves in.
Why? Because well-funded public access TV channels, with a few adequate facilities, staff, training, and equipment, will offer great benefit to our youth by giving them an ongoing and non-stop creative and constructive outlet and will help reduce crime, among many other positive things for our city. It will allow them to showcase their many different talents in sports and entertainment, and allow them to express their views on talk shows that they or others create around every important social, political, educational, and economic subject. If it's legal, adults, businesses, and foundations can sponsor and provide rewards of all types to winners in all kinds of contests within the many arenas of sports, education, entertainment, religion, philosophy, science, debate, new ideas, etc.
And everyone can wisely and creatively come up with more and more types of shows in order to lure our treasured youth off the streets and away from gangs, crime, and drugs to help educate them and to give them hope, opportunity, and creative activity in a great many ways.
And all these other individuals and groups can also produce and air their shows on the many channels of public access TV: schools, small and large non-profit groups and charities, religious organizations, social justice movements, youth and senior citizen organizations, entertainers, artists, scientists, poets, actors, writers, musicians, political candidates, and so on.
Here is my personal information, and my "Letter to the Editor".
John DeSantis
1113 Scotts Hill Drive
Baltimore, MD 21208
Please know that my address is in Pikesville.
I'm retired. My home number is:
(410) 484-1987
I'm a volunteer with Baltimore Grassroots Media (BGM).
========================================
Hopefully rich people and charitable foundations will fund public access TV in Baltimore
"O'Malley says Comcast agreement was best deal city could negotiate" (title of Nov. 18 article). It was also spoken of in this way by Council members during the City Council session on the 22nd, where it was approved and moved forward for the final vote on the 29th. Based on all that I have heard at the various Board of Estimates and City Council sessions, it's obvious that Comcast has won the day to inadequately fund public access TV in Baltimore in this new 12-year contract, which activity will probably take a few years to even get started in a small way. Because of this it's time for rich citizens in the city and region to consider saving the day and step up to the plate and donate one, two, or three million dollars a year, to be added to the meager funding otherwise provided by Comcast, and make, once and for all, public access TV a super-duper operation and activity for the citizens of Baltimore to use and express themselves in.
Why? Because well-funded public access TV channels, with a few adequate facilities, staff, training, and equipment, will offer great benefit to our youth by giving them an ongoing and non-stop creative and constructive outlet and will help reduce crime, among many other positive things for our city. It will allow them to showcase their many different talents in sports and entertainment, and allow them to express their views on talk shows that they or others create around every important social, political, educational, and economic subject. If it's legal, adults, businesses, and foundations can sponsor and provide rewards of all types to winners in all kinds of contests within the many arenas of sports, education, entertainment, religion, philosophy, science, debate, new ideas, etc.
And everyone can wisely and creatively come up with more and more types of shows in order to lure our treasured youth off the streets and away from gangs, crime, and drugs to help educate them and to give them hope, opportunity, and creative activity in a great many ways.
And all these other individuals and groups can also produce and air their shows on the many channels of public access TV: schools, small and large non-profit groups and charities, religious organizations, social justice movements, youth and senior citizen organizations, entertainers, artists, scientists, poets, actors, writers, musicians, political candidates, and so on.
Amber alert
please look at the picture, read what her father says, then forward his message on.
Maybe if every one passes this on someone will see this child, that is how the girl from Stevens Point was found by circulation of her picture on tv. The internet circulates even overseas South America, and Canada etc. Thanks
Please pass this to everyone in your address book.
We have a store manager (Wal-Mart) from Longs, SC who has a 9 year old daughter who has been missing for 2 weeks. Keep the picture moving on.
With luck on her side she will be found.
I am asking you all, begging you to please forward this email
on to anyone and everyone you know, PLEASE. My 9 year old girl,
Penny Brown, is missing. She has been missing for now two weeks..
It is still not too late. Please help us. If anyone anywhere
knows anything, please contact me at: zicozicozico@hotmail.com
I am including a picture of her.V All prayers are appreciated!!
It only takes 2 seconds to forward this on. If it was your child,
you would want all the help you could get.
please look at the picture, read what her father says, then forward his message on.

Maybe if every one passes this on someone will see this child, that is how the girl from Stevens Point was found by circulation of her picture on tv. The internet circulates even overseas South America, and Canada etc. Thanks
Please pass this to everyone in your address book.
We have a store manager (Wal-Mart) from Longs, SC who has a 9 year old daughter who has been missing for 2 weeks. Keep the picture moving on.
With luck on her side she will be found.
I am asking you all, begging you to please forward this email
on to anyone and everyone you know, PLEASE. My 9 year old girl,
Penny Brown, is missing. She has been missing for now two weeks..
It is still not too late. Please help us. If anyone anywhere
knows anything, please contact me at: zicozicozico@hotmail.com
I am including a picture of her.V All prayers are appreciated!!
It only takes 2 seconds to forward this on. If it was your child,
you would want all the help you could get.
Monday, November 22, 2004
Community and Citizen Media Review Board
I just started a discussion forum at QuickTopic for our topic
"CommunityReviewBoard". To join in (or just to read) use your
web browser to go to:
http://www.quicktopic.com/28/H/z7wXnamYjhR
You don't have to register or sign in, and you can choose to
receive email for newly posted messages -- just click the
Subscribe button when you get there.
"CommunityReviewBoard". To join in (or just to read) use your
web browser to go to:
http://www.quicktopic.com/28/H/z7wXnamYjhR
You don't have to register or sign in, and you can choose to
receive email for newly posted messages -- just click the
Subscribe button when you get there.
Friday, November 19, 2004
Public access TV in Baltimore is far more important than the internet
Public access TV in Baltimore is far more important than the internet "Letter to the Editor". By John DeSantis volunteer with Baltimore Grassroots Media (BGM).
In the November 18th Maryland section article written by Doug Donovan, entitled "O'Malley says Comcast agreement was best deal city could negotiate", Mayor O'Malley said that "Public access has been totally eclipsed by the Internet. We have to keep that in mind."
I find it hard to believe that the Mayor could say or even believe such a thing. The internet may be important in its own way, but based on the following thoughts of mine, I'd have to say that public access TV is far more important for Baltimore city:
Well-funded public access TV channels, with adequate facilities, staff, training, and equipment (not as our current unfunded public access channel that is without a staff, studio, and equipment), will offer great benefit to our youth by giving them an ongoing and non-stop creative and constructive outlet and will help reduce crime, among many other positive things for our city, like, just for example: allowing them to showcase their many different talents in sports and entertainment; allowing them to express their views on talk shows that they or others create around every important social, political, educational, and economic subject. Adults, businesses, and foundations can sponsor and provide rewards of all types to winners in all kinds of contests within the many arenas of sports, education, entertainment, religion, philosophy, science, debate, new ideas, etc.
Everyone in our Baltimore community, somehow organized and/or promoted by the media, should brainstorm together and come up with a long sample list of the very many and various kinds of shows that can be produced once we have a real and well-funded public access staff, equipment, and facilities -- especially for the youth of our city, inclusive of, and adequate to, all of their different age groups.
We can together wisely and creatively come up with more and more types of shows in order to lure our treasured youth off the streets and away from gangs, crime, and drugs -- a great variety of shows -- to help educate them and to give them hope, opportunity, and creative activity in a great many ways.
The Mayor, the City Council, the Board of Estimates, and Comcast, should, quote, "BELIEVE" in all this and see to it that it gets funded and put into action -- no matter where the money comes from!
Comcast should supply sufficient funding for public access TV. Because it funds many other communities better the mayor and the city council should vote down the proposed Comcast franchise agreement in favor of a better contract that includes more specifically allocated, yearly renewable funding for public access operating expenses.
From a moral and ethical point of view, a city the size and stature of Baltimore should not be treated in a poorly-funded denigrating, non-caring, and selfish way -- as it has been by Comcast; especially because of the enormous amount of money that Comcast makes off of its citizens each year who buy either its internet service, its cable TV service, or both -- like I do.
If public access TV is well-funded, Comcast will gain a lot more Baltimore cable TV subscribers who will want to see the shows that are produced, as well as all of the goodwill and respect that will be gained, leading to even more customers.
Why should Comcast, a rich corporation, bother with being socially conscious when it comes to public access TV? Because it can help Baltimore heal many social problems. Public access TV is naturally a very fair, uniting and healing social factor in the following important ways:
It absolutely leaves no one out and includes every citizen, rich and poor, every nationality, every race and ethnic group, and every institution and organization: schools, small and large non-profit groups and charities, religious organizations, businesses, social justice movements, youth and senior citizen organizations, entertainers, artists, scientists, poets, actors, writers, musicians, political candidates, and so on. Everyone, no matter what their ideas, reasons, or production formats, would be able to produce video tapes of shows to air on the many channels of public access TV if they ever wanted to -- once in a while or regularly. And everyone will want their friends, families, organizational members (and potential members), to see the shows that are produced -- and small and large businesses will want everyone to see the particular shows that they sponsor.
No matter how useful it is, in the final analysis, how can people sitting alone in a room and being on the internet compare with all of the important real-life activity and interaction for the city of Baltimore and its citizens that a well funded public access TV operation can provide?
If the Mayor, the City Council, the Board of Estimates, and Comcast can't, or won't, somehow work out a deal to put together sufficient funding for public access TV each and every year, no matter what all of their various individual or combined reasons might be, maybe in the final analysis, and in a wonderful save-the-day way, one or more of the many rich individuals, families, and charitable foundations in the city and region will step up to the plate and donate one, two, or three million dollars a year, to be added to the meager funding otherwise provided by Comcast, and make, once and for all, public access TV a super-duper operation and activity for the citizens of Baltimore to use and express themselves in.
In the November 18th Maryland section article written by Doug Donovan, entitled "O'Malley says Comcast agreement was best deal city could negotiate", Mayor O'Malley said that "Public access has been totally eclipsed by the Internet. We have to keep that in mind."
I find it hard to believe that the Mayor could say or even believe such a thing. The internet may be important in its own way, but based on the following thoughts of mine, I'd have to say that public access TV is far more important for Baltimore city:
Well-funded public access TV channels, with adequate facilities, staff, training, and equipment (not as our current unfunded public access channel that is without a staff, studio, and equipment), will offer great benefit to our youth by giving them an ongoing and non-stop creative and constructive outlet and will help reduce crime, among many other positive things for our city, like, just for example: allowing them to showcase their many different talents in sports and entertainment; allowing them to express their views on talk shows that they or others create around every important social, political, educational, and economic subject. Adults, businesses, and foundations can sponsor and provide rewards of all types to winners in all kinds of contests within the many arenas of sports, education, entertainment, religion, philosophy, science, debate, new ideas, etc.
Everyone in our Baltimore community, somehow organized and/or promoted by the media, should brainstorm together and come up with a long sample list of the very many and various kinds of shows that can be produced once we have a real and well-funded public access staff, equipment, and facilities -- especially for the youth of our city, inclusive of, and adequate to, all of their different age groups.
We can together wisely and creatively come up with more and more types of shows in order to lure our treasured youth off the streets and away from gangs, crime, and drugs -- a great variety of shows -- to help educate them and to give them hope, opportunity, and creative activity in a great many ways.
The Mayor, the City Council, the Board of Estimates, and Comcast, should, quote, "BELIEVE" in all this and see to it that it gets funded and put into action -- no matter where the money comes from!
Comcast should supply sufficient funding for public access TV. Because it funds many other communities better the mayor and the city council should vote down the proposed Comcast franchise agreement in favor of a better contract that includes more specifically allocated, yearly renewable funding for public access operating expenses.
From a moral and ethical point of view, a city the size and stature of Baltimore should not be treated in a poorly-funded denigrating, non-caring, and selfish way -- as it has been by Comcast; especially because of the enormous amount of money that Comcast makes off of its citizens each year who buy either its internet service, its cable TV service, or both -- like I do.
If public access TV is well-funded, Comcast will gain a lot more Baltimore cable TV subscribers who will want to see the shows that are produced, as well as all of the goodwill and respect that will be gained, leading to even more customers.
Why should Comcast, a rich corporation, bother with being socially conscious when it comes to public access TV? Because it can help Baltimore heal many social problems. Public access TV is naturally a very fair, uniting and healing social factor in the following important ways:
It absolutely leaves no one out and includes every citizen, rich and poor, every nationality, every race and ethnic group, and every institution and organization: schools, small and large non-profit groups and charities, religious organizations, businesses, social justice movements, youth and senior citizen organizations, entertainers, artists, scientists, poets, actors, writers, musicians, political candidates, and so on. Everyone, no matter what their ideas, reasons, or production formats, would be able to produce video tapes of shows to air on the many channels of public access TV if they ever wanted to -- once in a while or regularly. And everyone will want their friends, families, organizational members (and potential members), to see the shows that are produced -- and small and large businesses will want everyone to see the particular shows that they sponsor.
No matter how useful it is, in the final analysis, how can people sitting alone in a room and being on the internet compare with all of the important real-life activity and interaction for the city of Baltimore and its citizens that a well funded public access TV operation can provide?
If the Mayor, the City Council, the Board of Estimates, and Comcast can't, or won't, somehow work out a deal to put together sufficient funding for public access TV each and every year, no matter what all of their various individual or combined reasons might be, maybe in the final analysis, and in a wonderful save-the-day way, one or more of the many rich individuals, families, and charitable foundations in the city and region will step up to the plate and donate one, two, or three million dollars a year, to be added to the meager funding otherwise provided by Comcast, and make, once and for all, public access TV a super-duper operation and activity for the citizens of Baltimore to use and express themselves in.
Monday, November 15, 2004
Determination of Baltimore Cable Franchise Agreement, Incomplete
This coming Wednesday, November 17, 2004, there will be a news conference in front of Baltimore City Hall, at 8:15 a.m., supported by Baltimore Grassroots Media and other community organizations, as well as individual Baltimore Public Access TV City Comcast Channel 5 volunteers, producers of video shows. They will emphasize that the written and amended Comcast Cable Franchise Agreement, serves the community poorly and it would augment further an inferiority complex behavior by city citizens, which Mayor O'Malley stated he wants the city to lessen, during statement at the 3rd Annual Mayor's Cultural Town Meeting November 8, 2004 at Center Stage, when improving the city's image or appearance to the nation and world.
Also, the City Council will have another hearing of the Cable Franchise Agreement, on Thursday November 18, 2004, 12:30 p.m. There is reason to believe there will be a vote from them at that time.
Already the Board of Estimates has made a vote for the agreement with changes http://www.bpatv.org/City%20Board%20of%20Estimates%20OKs%20Comcast%20deal.doc
Letters have been sent to City Council representative and to media contacts stating the reasons for opposition to present terms of the Franchise Agreement.
The contract fails to include meaningful dedicated funding for public access TV, gives up four channels worth about $77 million, and will create a biased body to oversee the public access channel's management and content.
The contract fails to include meaningful dedicated funding for public access TV, gives up four channels worth about $77 million, and will create a biased body to oversee the public access channel's management and content.
Attempts to pass Council Bill 04-1504 Comcast Franchise Agreement prior to decision of Council Bill 04-1411, Ensuring Public Access Television for the Citizens of Baltimore City, introduced June 3, 2004. http://bpatv.org/Council%20Bill%2004-1411.htm
In addition: It is not in agreement with the City's Needs Assessment by a consulting contractor, Cable Television Needs Assessment Study For The City of Baltimore. http://www.bpatv.org/Cable%20Television%20Needs%20Assessment%20Study%20City%20of%20Baltimore%20PEG.pdf. Pages 1-10, sections 1.1 and 1.2, Key Findings and Identified Needs Summary
advises, annual revenue flow from Comcast, length of contract no longer than 10 years, increase in number of PEG channels, increase of bandwith,
It does not address many areas addressed in document WHAT BALTIMORE SHOULD HAVE: INFORMATION CHART
What Baltimore should have:
Media sources:
Also, the City Council will have another hearing of the Cable Franchise Agreement, on Thursday November 18, 2004, 12:30 p.m. There is reason to believe there will be a vote from them at that time.
Already the Board of Estimates has made a vote for the agreement with changes http://www.bpatv.org/City%20Board%20of%20Estimates%20OKs%20Comcast%20deal.doc
Letters have been sent to City Council representative and to media contacts stating the reasons for opposition to present terms of the Franchise Agreement.
The contract fails to include meaningful dedicated funding for public access TV, gives up four channels worth about $77 million, and will create a biased body to oversee the public access channel's management and content.
The contract fails to include meaningful dedicated funding for public access TV, gives up four channels worth about $77 million, and will create a biased body to oversee the public access channel's management and content.
Attempts to pass Council Bill 04-1504 Comcast Franchise Agreement prior to decision of Council Bill 04-1411, Ensuring Public Access Television for the Citizens of Baltimore City, introduced June 3, 2004. http://bpatv.org/Council%20Bill%2004-1411.htm
In addition: It is not in agreement with the City's Needs Assessment by a consulting contractor, Cable Television Needs Assessment Study For The City of Baltimore. http://www.bpatv.org/Cable%20Television%20Needs%20Assessment%20Study%20City%20of%20Baltimore%20PEG.pdf. Pages 1-10, sections 1.1 and 1.2, Key Findings and Identified Needs Summary
advises, annual revenue flow from Comcast, length of contract no longer than 10 years, increase in number of PEG channels, increase of bandwith,
It does not address many areas addressed in document WHAT BALTIMORE SHOULD HAVE: INFORMATION CHART
What Baltimore should have:
A specific percentage of the franchise fee should go to public access. (BGM advises 2% of gross revenues for public access; 1% for educational access; 1% for governmental access. 5% franchise fee paid to the City by Comcast goes into a general fund; $0 is earmarked specifically for a public access fund.)
An initial grant, to be used to completely rebuild public access television in Baltimore; a certain fee to be charged per subscriber per month in the years thereafter. (Comcast has given no money for public access equipment and facilities during the current contract.)
At least 3 facilities with video, audio, and editing equipment, as well as training facilities, within easy access of public transportation.. (Channel 5 is run out of the MOCC office downtown – there are only playback facilities and there is no equipment or training available.)
A percentage of digital bandwidth (channel space) allocated for public access. (BGM advises 10% of digital bandwidth (channel space) to be designated for PEG access, with 3.3% specifically for public access. Only one channel, Channel 5, exists. BGM advises 3 Public Channels, #1-Public Announcements and General Programming, #2 Religious Programming, #3 Multi-Lingual Video Programming.)
An organization which is Public access operator which is completely separate from the City and Comcast, has a democratically elected, demographically representative Board, and has an open membership (anyone who lives, works, or is a member of an organization within the City of Baltimore. (Public access is controlled by the MOCC, in facilities which are designated for the use of the City for governmental programming. There is no independent organization running public access.)
Media sources:
http://bpatv.org/bcpa_tv.html
http://baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org/
http://baltimorepublicaccessnewswire.blogspot.com/
City Board of Estimates OKs Comcast deal
Baltimore Mayor's Cultural Town Meeting November 8, 2004. Announcements of New Programs
City Cable Deal short-circuits much needed Public Access, groups say. By Ezra K. Feiser, Daily Record Business Writer
Baltimore Grassroots Media Press Release 10-19-04 Board of Estimates, Mayor to Consider Fate of Baltimore Public Access TV: Mayor O’Malley’s Own Cable Experts Say Better PATV Provisions are Needed, but Comcast is a Major Contributor to His Campaign.
Protesters say deal will hurt public TV
Baltimore Sun: by Doug Donovan Planned TV deal raises concern
City’s Proposed Cable Contract Lacks Public Access TV Provisions
Cable Television Needs Assessment Study For The City of Baltimore
Exhibit VI PEG Access Photos
Council Bill 04-1411, Ensuring Public Access Television for the Citizens of Baltimore City.
WHAT BALTIMORE SHOULD HAVE: INFORMATION CHART
8/23/04: Public Access TV Advocates Call on City Council Members Dixon, Curran, Harris, and Mitchell to Recuse Themselves from Cable Franchise Vote
Thursday, November 11, 2004
John DeSantis said at the Board of Estimates meeting on November 10th
Subject: [BGM] What I said at the Board of Estimates meeting on November 10th
Just in case there may be some useful ideas that we can together use to
put into some kind of an action in the future, I want everyone on the
BGM mailing list to know what I composed and read at the Board of
Estimates meeting on Wednesday morning.
Here it is.--John:
========================
Well funded public access TV channels, with adequate facilities, staff,
training, and equipment (not as our current unfunded public access
channel that is without a staff, studio, and equipment), will offer
great benefit to our youth by giving them an ongoing and non-stop
creative and constructive outlet and will help reduce crime, among many
other positive things for our city, like, just for example: allowing
them to showcase their many different talents in sports and
entertainment; allowing them to express their views on talk shows that
they or others create around every important social, political,
educational, and economic subject. Adults, businesses, and foundations
can sponsor and provide rewards of all types to winners in all kinds of
contests (sports, educational, entertainment, debate, new ideas, etc.)
Everyone in our Baltimore community, somehow organized and/or promoted
by the media, should brainstorm together and come up with a long sample
list of the very many and various kinds of shows that can be produced
once we have a real and well-funded public access staff, equipment, and
facilities -- especially for the youth of our city, inclusive of, and
adequate to, all of their different age groups.
We can together wisely and creatively come up with more and more types
of shows in order to lure our treasured youth off the streets and away
from gangs, crime, and drugs -- a great variety of shows -- to help
educate them and to give them hope, opportunity, and creative activity
in a great many ways.
The Mayor, the City Council, the Board of Estimates, and Comcast,
should, quote, "BELIEVE" in all this and see to it that it gets funded
and put into action -- no matter where the money comes from.
Thanks for listening and considering these ideas.
Just in case there may be some useful ideas that we can together use to
put into some kind of an action in the future, I want everyone on the
BGM mailing list to know what I composed and read at the Board of
Estimates meeting on Wednesday morning.
Here it is.--John:
========================
Well funded public access TV channels, with adequate facilities, staff,
training, and equipment (not as our current unfunded public access
channel that is without a staff, studio, and equipment), will offer
great benefit to our youth by giving them an ongoing and non-stop
creative and constructive outlet and will help reduce crime, among many
other positive things for our city, like, just for example: allowing
them to showcase their many different talents in sports and
entertainment; allowing them to express their views on talk shows that
they or others create around every important social, political,
educational, and economic subject. Adults, businesses, and foundations
can sponsor and provide rewards of all types to winners in all kinds of
contests (sports, educational, entertainment, debate, new ideas, etc.)
Everyone in our Baltimore community, somehow organized and/or promoted
by the media, should brainstorm together and come up with a long sample
list of the very many and various kinds of shows that can be produced
once we have a real and well-funded public access staff, equipment, and
facilities -- especially for the youth of our city, inclusive of, and
adequate to, all of their different age groups.
We can together wisely and creatively come up with more and more types
of shows in order to lure our treasured youth off the streets and away
from gangs, crime, and drugs -- a great variety of shows -- to help
educate them and to give them hope, opportunity, and creative activity
in a great many ways.
The Mayor, the City Council, the Board of Estimates, and Comcast,
should, quote, "BELIEVE" in all this and see to it that it gets funded
and put into action -- no matter where the money comes from.
Thanks for listening and considering these ideas.
Monday, November 08, 2004
Baltimore Mayor's Cultural Town Meeting November 8, 2004. Announcements of New Programs.
November 8, 2004
Center Stage, Head Theatre
700 North Calvert Street
7:00 p.m.
The 3rd Annual Mayor's Cultural Town Meeting
Building on Success / Building Community
The following announcements during this event:
Panelists Introductions, Presentations, and Speeches:
Moderator: Dr. Leslie King-Hammond, Dean of Graduate Studies, MICA
Presentors:
Gin Ferrara, Director, Wide Angle Community Media - Local and Regional Attention for the Youth. Very generous to them. Numerous films and TV series. Baltimore is International City for better or for worse. What happens in our own backyards are often only heard in our own backyards. Main mission is to work with community groups to tell and hear their own stories. Teach media literacy production, partnerships with Creative Alliance and relationships Enoch Pratt Library. Works have gone to national film festivals and one of their students have received a scholarships to college at Minneapolis College of Art and Design. Future hopes are more media distribution and to expand across the city. Hope that there will be a Public Access Channel that will be showing programs in an ongoing way and that we can tell the programming schedule to tell others. Hope to make a bigger picture of Baltimore.
Donald Owens, Artistic Director, Arena Players - Future productions planned. Art is essential to life. Produce plays, have a huge youth theater, learn discipline, value life and air that they breathe. Many have gone on to higher levels and fields. Plays, original writings, Shakepeare, Boliere, to local guy around corner, with Studio 801 and adults, teaching acting, Directing, screen writing, stage managements, speaking, a meeting place for the community. Art involves the community. Improves the quality of life, thought process, evaluating, cultural exchange, teenagers to Rotterdam. There is struggles to survive.
Cheryl Goodman, Founder/Director, Dance Baltimore, Inc.- New organization. There was no dance audience, had no sustained Ballet Company for a long time. Created to identify this audience. Everybody dances in some way or time. Thirty five dance professional companies and individuals met to indentify areas of opportunities, performances, media development, audiences and to know one another. Hippodrome Foundation gave the Morris Mechanic and Greater Baltimore Cultural Alliance able to provide administrative management. Can help schools and individuals. Dance Baltimore 2005 will be held at the Hippodrome Theater.
Deborah Bedwell, Executive Director, Baltimore Clayworks - Late 70s were passionate in clay and its potentials. Renovated Mt. Washington Libary and the St. Paul Cos. gave a building. Serve two communities of artists and the City in which it happens. Recruit from all over the world and the United States to enrich cultural community. Provide facilities and new building in 2005. At Mondawmin Mall there is a Clayworks satellite location to work and teach, to reach a community based access. Tour de Clay largest visual arts event in the country in Baltimore, after request National Council of the Education for the Ceramic Arts Conference will be held in Baltimore, five days in mid March of 2005, 5,000 attendees. There will be expansion 2005.
Tom Hall, Music Director, Baltimore Choral Arts Society - Contribute through inspiration, help teaches educate students force in their lives, collaborate with schools, artists, and organizations programs. Holiday sing performance at the Hippodrome, Morgan State University Choir dedicated to Dr. Nathan Carter. 10 worshops for students. 20 to community groups. Group singing great way to generate social capital. Approaching 40th Anniversary.
Mayor Martin O'Malley Comments:
Questions from audience and Answers from the Mayor and Support Representatives
Audience Questions were asked:
Q. How to increase cultural arts on the medias, further Public Access Ch. 5?
A. Metro publication will soon be available, will showcase good news. Learn about the good things, through internet, newsletters. News and media will follow eventually.
Q. Plans to bring back garment industry, fashion shows?
A. Mentioned Baltimore Sun article about Mt. Vernon fashion show, Travis Winkie with Caribbean entourage. Need fashion district. Artscape will be adding fashions.
Q. Recognize Coppin State University. Regarding nuisance fires, need technical assistance, better lighting and sound equipment that many schools don't have to budget cutbacks.
A. Met with Student Council representatives, Walbrook did not have enough art supplies for rally, play the Wiz.
Q. Community based art center. Where to start out?
A. Go to Office for Promotion and Arts. Call City Office of Neighborhoods, Izzy Potoca 410-396-3835.
Q. Great job with Jewish American Festival. Maryland School for the Arts, why not more African American are not involved there. About new Baltimore Arena?
A. Not sure of racial breakdown. Not enough news coverage. Looked like diversity of kids. At opening looked like African American kids. Baltimore Arena is old, looking at making and planning, Greater Baltimore Committee interested. Will not be negative, looking into new arena. Would like it at same place now downtown. Would mean to close it for a year or more. Ramshead will open live events at Power Plant Live! in 2005, to hold 800 people, had only Bohager's tent.
Q. What is status of Morris Mechanic Theatre?
A. Mrs. Mechanic and realestate representatives, with Frances Merrick Foundation, are continuing to consider uses of Morris Mechanic Theatre. There is thoughts that use will be for community use. City officials will also have meeting with them.
Q. What about providing further transportation links from Metro redline, and from airports, etc.
A. Planners will take a look at extending the DC Metro line to BWI Airport, so then a link to light rail, to travel to downtown city events.
Q. Mike Shea, Baltimore Grassroots Media and Baltimore Public Access TV Volunteer, asked why does Baltimore continue to back the present Comcast Cable Franchise Agreement as written, when other cities have received a better terms than Baltimore. 4 Public Access channels lost equals $750,000 revenue per year.
A. There will be changes to agreement concerning minority hiring contracts. Not aware of the Washington DC arrangement. Will tell Comcast that they are treating Baltimore "shabbily". There are decisions in where funding can be found.
[Comcast Cable Franchise Agreement for 12 years will not be ratified as originally written, per mayor and legal department, due to minority contract issues, pending Board of Estimates meeting 11/10/04 and City Council decision pending]
Q. What about extending bar, clubs and restaurant hours like in Washington D.C.?
A. There is consideration in extending late night life hours similar to Washington, D.C.
Center Stage, Head Theatre
700 North Calvert Street
7:00 p.m.
The 3rd Annual Mayor's Cultural Town Meeting
Building on Success / Building Community
The following announcements during this event:
Panelists Introductions, Presentations, and Speeches:
Moderator: Dr. Leslie King-Hammond, Dean of Graduate Studies, MICA
Presentors:
Gin Ferrara, Director, Wide Angle Community Media - Local and Regional Attention for the Youth. Very generous to them. Numerous films and TV series. Baltimore is International City for better or for worse. What happens in our own backyards are often only heard in our own backyards. Main mission is to work with community groups to tell and hear their own stories. Teach media literacy production, partnerships with Creative Alliance and relationships Enoch Pratt Library. Works have gone to national film festivals and one of their students have received a scholarships to college at Minneapolis College of Art and Design. Future hopes are more media distribution and to expand across the city. Hope that there will be a Public Access Channel that will be showing programs in an ongoing way and that we can tell the programming schedule to tell others. Hope to make a bigger picture of Baltimore.
Donald Owens, Artistic Director, Arena Players - Future productions planned. Art is essential to life. Produce plays, have a huge youth theater, learn discipline, value life and air that they breathe. Many have gone on to higher levels and fields. Plays, original writings, Shakepeare, Boliere, to local guy around corner, with Studio 801 and adults, teaching acting, Directing, screen writing, stage managements, speaking, a meeting place for the community. Art involves the community. Improves the quality of life, thought process, evaluating, cultural exchange, teenagers to Rotterdam. There is struggles to survive.
Cheryl Goodman, Founder/Director, Dance Baltimore, Inc.- New organization. There was no dance audience, had no sustained Ballet Company for a long time. Created to identify this audience. Everybody dances in some way or time. Thirty five dance professional companies and individuals met to indentify areas of opportunities, performances, media development, audiences and to know one another. Hippodrome Foundation gave the Morris Mechanic and Greater Baltimore Cultural Alliance able to provide administrative management. Can help schools and individuals. Dance Baltimore 2005 will be held at the Hippodrome Theater.
Deborah Bedwell, Executive Director, Baltimore Clayworks - Late 70s were passionate in clay and its potentials. Renovated Mt. Washington Libary and the St. Paul Cos. gave a building. Serve two communities of artists and the City in which it happens. Recruit from all over the world and the United States to enrich cultural community. Provide facilities and new building in 2005. At Mondawmin Mall there is a Clayworks satellite location to work and teach, to reach a community based access. Tour de Clay largest visual arts event in the country in Baltimore, after request National Council of the Education for the Ceramic Arts Conference will be held in Baltimore, five days in mid March of 2005, 5,000 attendees. There will be expansion 2005.
Tom Hall, Music Director, Baltimore Choral Arts Society - Contribute through inspiration, help teaches educate students force in their lives, collaborate with schools, artists, and organizations programs. Holiday sing performance at the Hippodrome, Morgan State University Choir dedicated to Dr. Nathan Carter. 10 worshops for students. 20 to community groups. Group singing great way to generate social capital. Approaching 40th Anniversary.
Mayor Martin O'Malley Comments:
- Important topic and great cause. Really making a difference. Moving and changing the image of Baltimore everyday.
- Greatest assets are are in the arts, people and culture. Humbled by your talents and creativity.
- Constant threats in our young peoples lives, violence in neighborhoods, nuisance fires in schools. Rely on arts and culture to bring up the best things.
- Trying to be a better partner to the arts, by listening.
- Bond Issue H, won, 1.875 million targeting Station North and Highlandtown, Patterson Theater.
- The Bromo Seltzer Building will begin renovation for 15 artistic space housing, gallery, retail space in Fall, 2005. A second stairway will be built.
- Get more grant dollars that can go a long ways.
- 30 S. Calvert St. Studio space by cooperative, Downtown Partnership, BDC, Planning Department. Model for other city owned stable creative space.
- Artscape 2005 will be without light rail operation due to double track construction. There will be pressure on MTA to make travel better.
- Street performance ordinance has been passed by City Council.
- Hired mural program coodinator and to expand program with 10 murals.
- Hired 127 art teachers in school, after, and summer arts programs, with workshops.
- The War Memorial Plaza open area will be changed to grass so that people can sit during events.
- Mentioned inferiority complex. Designated by Forbes Magazine as the "Bohemian Bargain", "has it's groove back".
- Need to expand our boundaries such as University of Maryland.
- Have opportunity to thrive, in light of Federal administration with cuts in funding.
Questions from audience and Answers from the Mayor and Support Representatives
Audience Questions were asked:
Q. How to increase cultural arts on the medias, further Public Access Ch. 5?
A. Metro publication will soon be available, will showcase good news. Learn about the good things, through internet, newsletters. News and media will follow eventually.
Q. Plans to bring back garment industry, fashion shows?
A. Mentioned Baltimore Sun article about Mt. Vernon fashion show, Travis Winkie with Caribbean entourage. Need fashion district. Artscape will be adding fashions.
Q. Recognize Coppin State University. Regarding nuisance fires, need technical assistance, better lighting and sound equipment that many schools don't have to budget cutbacks.
A. Met with Student Council representatives, Walbrook did not have enough art supplies for rally, play the Wiz.
Q. Community based art center. Where to start out?
A. Go to Office for Promotion and Arts. Call City Office of Neighborhoods, Izzy Potoca 410-396-3835.
Q. Great job with Jewish American Festival. Maryland School for the Arts, why not more African American are not involved there. About new Baltimore Arena?
A. Not sure of racial breakdown. Not enough news coverage. Looked like diversity of kids. At opening looked like African American kids. Baltimore Arena is old, looking at making and planning, Greater Baltimore Committee interested. Will not be negative, looking into new arena. Would like it at same place now downtown. Would mean to close it for a year or more. Ramshead will open live events at Power Plant Live! in 2005, to hold 800 people, had only Bohager's tent.
Q. What is status of Morris Mechanic Theatre?
A. Mrs. Mechanic and realestate representatives, with Frances Merrick Foundation, are continuing to consider uses of Morris Mechanic Theatre. There is thoughts that use will be for community use. City officials will also have meeting with them.
Q. What about providing further transportation links from Metro redline, and from airports, etc.
A. Planners will take a look at extending the DC Metro line to BWI Airport, so then a link to light rail, to travel to downtown city events.
Q. Mike Shea, Baltimore Grassroots Media and Baltimore Public Access TV Volunteer, asked why does Baltimore continue to back the present Comcast Cable Franchise Agreement as written, when other cities have received a better terms than Baltimore. 4 Public Access channels lost equals $750,000 revenue per year.
A. There will be changes to agreement concerning minority hiring contracts. Not aware of the Washington DC arrangement. Will tell Comcast that they are treating Baltimore "shabbily". There are decisions in where funding can be found.
[Comcast Cable Franchise Agreement for 12 years will not be ratified as originally written, per mayor and legal department, due to minority contract issues, pending Board of Estimates meeting 11/10/04 and City Council decision pending]
Q. What about extending bar, clubs and restaurant hours like in Washington D.C.?
A. There is consideration in extending late night life hours similar to Washington, D.C.
Tuesday, November 02, 2004
DCTV, City Council at odds over budget
DCTV, City Council at odds over budget
By April M. Washington, Rocky Mountain NewsOctober 28, 2004
Denver Community Television is at a crossroads as it struggles to keep from fading to black in the face of a severe funding cut. On Wednesday, the Denver City Council and Mayor John Hickenlooper gave DCTV a reprieve of sorts by earmarking $265,000 in the city's 2005 budget for the station. "With everything going on in the city, we have stepped up to the plate to support public-access television," said City Council President Elbra Wedgeworth. "Now they have to come to the table and step up. They have no choice now. They are like any other city agency now. They have to submit a budget every year, and there are no guarantees," she said. More than two dozen residents and DCTV supporters criticized the council and administration earlier this week for its decision not to fully fund the station.
Its budget has been sliced by nearly half from the $500,000 it had grown accustomed to receiving since its inception in 1990. That money came from Comcast Cable under terms of a contract with the city, but the pact expired in January, leaving the operation low on cash and forcing the city to come to its aid. Of the $265,000 allocated, $150,000 must be spent solely on equipment. That leaves $115,000 to cover staff salaries and rent.
Community leaders argued that the city should fully bankroll DCTV, contending it is a community asset that has given organizations and citizen groups shut out by the mainstream media an outlet to express their views and air their voices. "Our primary shortfall is that we didn't raise as much money as we should have," said Mark Bussinger, chairman of the DCTV board. "If you don't have access to the airwaves, you don't have a voice in this society."
Denver resident Carolyn Phillips, who produces a show on DCTV with Cole Middle School students, echoed those sentiments. "Its the only voice the minority community has," she said.
DCTV, which has a studio along Welton Street in the Five Points area, broadcasts an array of homespun programs on channels 56, 57 and 58. The budget shortfall leaves DCTV's management, board and supporters struggling to rebuild, said Dr. Agnes Martin, the new executive director of the station who was appointed in August. DCTV's six-member board also has seen a shake-up. Three members have been replaced, and Martin is seeking to recruit new members from area corporations and foundations to help guide the station.
"There are people really concerned about DCTV staying in the community," Martin said. "DCTV will survive. We will be stepping up to the plate. I'm praying everything works out." Martin has proposed a 10-point business plan designed to bolster fund-raising. The first plan of action: The station will launch a membership drive in November and broadcast a telethon in December to try to raise about $100,000 to supplement next year's budget and to avoid cuts in its staff of 12 technicians. Bussinger said DCTV signed two contracts with the city in 2004 that required it to raise 10 percent of its operating budget. DCTV raised $50,000, exceeding its mandate.
Now it's being asked to raise 80 percent of its operating costs for 2005, he said, an expectation "that hasn't been accomplished by any cable public-access television operation in the country." Wedgeworth disagreed. "For a year and a half, we've been trying to find way out of this problem," Wedgeworth said. "They have done zero. The board didn't keep the staff or producers informed. They always thought the city would bail them out."
By April M. Washington, Rocky Mountain NewsOctober 28, 2004
Denver Community Television is at a crossroads as it struggles to keep from fading to black in the face of a severe funding cut. On Wednesday, the Denver City Council and Mayor John Hickenlooper gave DCTV a reprieve of sorts by earmarking $265,000 in the city's 2005 budget for the station. "With everything going on in the city, we have stepped up to the plate to support public-access television," said City Council President Elbra Wedgeworth. "Now they have to come to the table and step up. They have no choice now. They are like any other city agency now. They have to submit a budget every year, and there are no guarantees," she said. More than two dozen residents and DCTV supporters criticized the council and administration earlier this week for its decision not to fully fund the station.
Its budget has been sliced by nearly half from the $500,000 it had grown accustomed to receiving since its inception in 1990. That money came from Comcast Cable under terms of a contract with the city, but the pact expired in January, leaving the operation low on cash and forcing the city to come to its aid. Of the $265,000 allocated, $150,000 must be spent solely on equipment. That leaves $115,000 to cover staff salaries and rent.
Community leaders argued that the city should fully bankroll DCTV, contending it is a community asset that has given organizations and citizen groups shut out by the mainstream media an outlet to express their views and air their voices. "Our primary shortfall is that we didn't raise as much money as we should have," said Mark Bussinger, chairman of the DCTV board. "If you don't have access to the airwaves, you don't have a voice in this society."
Denver resident Carolyn Phillips, who produces a show on DCTV with Cole Middle School students, echoed those sentiments. "Its the only voice the minority community has," she said.
DCTV, which has a studio along Welton Street in the Five Points area, broadcasts an array of homespun programs on channels 56, 57 and 58. The budget shortfall leaves DCTV's management, board and supporters struggling to rebuild, said Dr. Agnes Martin, the new executive director of the station who was appointed in August. DCTV's six-member board also has seen a shake-up. Three members have been replaced, and Martin is seeking to recruit new members from area corporations and foundations to help guide the station.
"There are people really concerned about DCTV staying in the community," Martin said. "DCTV will survive. We will be stepping up to the plate. I'm praying everything works out." Martin has proposed a 10-point business plan designed to bolster fund-raising. The first plan of action: The station will launch a membership drive in November and broadcast a telethon in December to try to raise about $100,000 to supplement next year's budget and to avoid cuts in its staff of 12 technicians. Bussinger said DCTV signed two contracts with the city in 2004 that required it to raise 10 percent of its operating budget. DCTV raised $50,000, exceeding its mandate.
Now it's being asked to raise 80 percent of its operating costs for 2005, he said, an expectation "that hasn't been accomplished by any cable public-access television operation in the country." Wedgeworth disagreed. "For a year and a half, we've been trying to find way out of this problem," Wedgeworth said. "They have done zero. The board didn't keep the staff or producers informed. They always thought the city would bail them out."
Monday, October 18, 2004
"All Hollows Eve" is quickly sneaking into the chilling air and what better time to be entertained by the ghosts of futures past! Leave your tiny tots with the sitter and bring along your teens to this "costumes welcome" event!!!
Tickets are 10 Dollars and include GARDEL'S after party Maryland-based director Robert G. Christie is proud to announce the premiere of full feature film "No Longer My Twin" at the Chesapeake Arts Center onOctober 26th at 7pm. For directions to the theater see http://www.chesapeakearts.org/. Having screened at the traveling New York International Film Festival in New York and Las Vegas, "No Longer My Twin" is a supernatural thriller about a young housewife who, after a miscarriage, encounters a ghost that appearsto be her identical twin. "If you kill you, then you kill me" are the hauntingly whispered words of the ghostly visitor. But what can those words possibly mean? This innovative PG-rated film intends to frighten its audience psychologically. "Without an ounce of bloodshed, I was chilled to the bone by this movie," remarked one festival viewer. And..."Loved the intensity of this film. It really spooks you", says United Pictures International.
Tickets are $10, which includes admission and the after-party at Gardel's restaurant in Baltimore, owned by "The O.C." actor Johnny Alonso and family. Our VIP guest speaker is Francis Xavier, producer/director/writer of the acclaimed film "Barry's Gift" and the recent released "Johnny Come Lately", both films starring Johnny Alonso, Lance Kerwin, and Irv Becker.
At Gardel's, Johnny Alonso and family will be on hand and are offering 10% to 20% discounts meals and drinks and limited free-drink tickets to guests who attend the screening. Gardel's has been written up for it's three star exquisite dining and offers ballroom dancing in it's main venue and a nightclub atmosphere in it's second floor Galaxy, both of which have quickly become the new"hot spot " frequented by such acclaimed celebrities as, Robert Duvall, Director John Waters, Barry Levinson and stars from the Wire and many of your East Coast talent. This definitely promises be a networking event not to be missed, with Francis Xavier personally on hand to reveal his new anthology series for TV and Robert G. Christie scouting talent for his next two feature films slated to begin production in late 2004 and 2005 - Actors, bring your head shots and resumes to Gardel's after party !!! Johnny Alonso has accepted a lead role for Robert's next feature, a science fiction thriller, the "The Sobbing Stone"....along with John Doyle of "Serial Mom" and "Line of Fire" John Doyle has also embarked on his own comedy production, "The Falsetoes". Directors and talent alike are on fire and ready for action! Join in, be entertained, groove with the best and make your mark!
Gardel's is located at 29 S. Front Street (21201) parallel to President St, intersecting Baltimore St, approx. 20 minutes north from the Chesapeake Arts Center in Glen Burnie. Gardel's phone is (410) 837-3737.
For more information on Robert Christie and his past films please visit http://www.rcfeatures.com/. Or email rcfeatures@a....
Tickets are 10 Dollars and include GARDEL'S after party Maryland-based director Robert G. Christie is proud to announce the premiere of full feature film "No Longer My Twin" at the Chesapeake Arts Center onOctober 26th at 7pm. For directions to the theater see http://www.chesapeakearts.org/. Having screened at the traveling New York International Film Festival in New York and Las Vegas, "No Longer My Twin" is a supernatural thriller about a young housewife who, after a miscarriage, encounters a ghost that appearsto be her identical twin. "If you kill you, then you kill me" are the hauntingly whispered words of the ghostly visitor. But what can those words possibly mean? This innovative PG-rated film intends to frighten its audience psychologically. "Without an ounce of bloodshed, I was chilled to the bone by this movie," remarked one festival viewer. And..."Loved the intensity of this film. It really spooks you", says United Pictures International.
Tickets are $10, which includes admission and the after-party at Gardel's restaurant in Baltimore, owned by "The O.C." actor Johnny Alonso and family. Our VIP guest speaker is Francis Xavier, producer/director/writer of the acclaimed film "Barry's Gift" and the recent released "Johnny Come Lately", both films starring Johnny Alonso, Lance Kerwin, and Irv Becker.
At Gardel's, Johnny Alonso and family will be on hand and are offering 10% to 20% discounts meals and drinks and limited free-drink tickets to guests who attend the screening. Gardel's has been written up for it's three star exquisite dining and offers ballroom dancing in it's main venue and a nightclub atmosphere in it's second floor Galaxy, both of which have quickly become the new"hot spot " frequented by such acclaimed celebrities as, Robert Duvall, Director John Waters, Barry Levinson and stars from the Wire and many of your East Coast talent. This definitely promises be a networking event not to be missed, with Francis Xavier personally on hand to reveal his new anthology series for TV and Robert G. Christie scouting talent for his next two feature films slated to begin production in late 2004 and 2005 - Actors, bring your head shots and resumes to Gardel's after party !!! Johnny Alonso has accepted a lead role for Robert's next feature, a science fiction thriller, the "The Sobbing Stone"....along with John Doyle of "Serial Mom" and "Line of Fire" John Doyle has also embarked on his own comedy production, "The Falsetoes". Directors and talent alike are on fire and ready for action! Join in, be entertained, groove with the best and make your mark!
Gardel's is located at 29 S. Front Street (21201) parallel to President St, intersecting Baltimore St, approx. 20 minutes north from the Chesapeake Arts Center in Glen Burnie. Gardel's phone is (410) 837-3737.
For more information on Robert Christie and his past films please visit http://www.rcfeatures.com/. Or email rcfeatures@a....
An OPEN FORUM to introduce the Key Highway Beautification Project Plan (KHBP)
Subject:
[BGM] OPEN FORUM this Wednesday at 7:00pm
An OPEN FORUM to introduce the Key Highway
Beautification Project Plan (KHBP) and to get
resident, business, industry and general community
input will be held THIS Wednesday, October 20 at 7:00
p.m. at the Harborview Tower in the meeting room just
off the lobby. Please come (and bring your neighbors
and friends) and contribute your comments, questions,
concerns and suggestions and let us know how you
envision the entranceway into our neighborhood, that
1/2 mile stretch of Key Highway from E. McComas St. to
East Key Highway. What plantings, sidewalks, lighting,
etc do you feel we need?
The meeting is open to all residents and businesses in
the area. Speakers will include the Project Engineer,
Landscape Architect and officials from City Planning
and the Department of Transportation. Also, meet the
muralist as the CSX wall is nearly completed.
We will gather at 6:30 for a Social Half-Hour. The
Wine Market is providing wine, mini gourmet
sandwiches, cheese trays, and fruit and veggie trays.
The meeting will begin at 7:00.
Hope to see you there! For more information, call
Nicole Pastore Klein, KHBP President, at 410-332-8854
or email her nickipastore@yahoo.com
[BGM] OPEN FORUM this Wednesday at 7:00pm
An OPEN FORUM to introduce the Key Highway
Beautification Project Plan (KHBP) and to get
resident, business, industry and general community
input will be held THIS Wednesday, October 20 at 7:00
p.m. at the Harborview Tower in the meeting room just
off the lobby. Please come (and bring your neighbors
and friends) and contribute your comments, questions,
concerns and suggestions and let us know how you
envision the entranceway into our neighborhood, that
1/2 mile stretch of Key Highway from E. McComas St. to
East Key Highway. What plantings, sidewalks, lighting,
etc do you feel we need?
The meeting is open to all residents and businesses in
the area. Speakers will include the Project Engineer,
Landscape Architect and officials from City Planning
and the Department of Transportation. Also, meet the
muralist as the CSX wall is nearly completed.
We will gather at 6:30 for a Social Half-Hour. The
Wine Market is providing wine, mini gourmet
sandwiches, cheese trays, and fruit and veggie trays.
The meeting will begin at 7:00.
Hope to see you there! For more information, call
Nicole Pastore Klein, KHBP President, at 410-332-8854
or email her nickipastore@yahoo.com
"Presidential News Conference"
“I did complete my political video called simply "Presidential News Conference". It runs 2 1/2 minutes..........Do you still think you can get it on TV? It’s being played as part of a traveling ANTI bush political festival around all the swing states for the next few weeks leading up to the election. I’m trying to put this up on line and let the bloggers take over. Can you check this out and see if it opens correctly and that the sound is working too?”
http://uglyworld.org/pressconference.htm
billy
uglyworld@comcast.net
http://uglyworld.org/pressconference.htm
billy
uglyworld@comcast.net
[the true vine] 78 listening night at the Golden West Friday the22nd
Subject: [the true vine] 78 listening night at the Golden West Friday the22nd
>Date: Mon, 18 Oct 2004 06:10:56 -0400
>
>This Friday the 22nd
>at the Golden West
>on the 1100 block of W 36th (a few doors down from the True Vine)
>
>Justin (from Soundgarden and the Golden West)
>Jack (from El Supremo)
>and your truly, DJ Baffling Paternity (from the True Vine)
>
>will be spinning mossy, crusty, filthy old 78s
>from 10PM till 1 AM
>for your listening pleasure.
>
>for my own part, I'll be playing recordings from the 20s and 30s and 40s made in distant lands: Laos, India, Denmark, Ireland, Vietnam, Bali, Greece, Turkey, Japan, Spain, Sardinia, Serbia, Guinea, etc.
>dunno about the other guys, but count on some hillbilly, gospel, blues r&b, c&w, jazz, novelties and other delights.
>
>see you there.
>Date: Mon, 18 Oct 2004 06:10:56 -0400
>
>This Friday the 22nd
>at the Golden West
>on the 1100 block of W 36th (a few doors down from the True Vine)
>
>Justin (from Soundgarden and the Golden West)
>Jack (from El Supremo)
>and your truly, DJ Baffling Paternity (from the True Vine)
>
>will be spinning mossy, crusty, filthy old 78s
>from 10PM till 1 AM
>for your listening pleasure.
>
>for my own part, I'll be playing recordings from the 20s and 30s and 40s made in distant lands: Laos, India, Denmark, Ireland, Vietnam, Bali, Greece, Turkey, Japan, Spain, Sardinia, Serbia, Guinea, etc.
>dunno about the other guys, but count on some hillbilly, gospel, blues r&b, c&w, jazz, novelties and other delights.
>
>see you there.
Wednesday, October 13, 2004
Wednesday October 13, Rally at City Hall 4:00 p.m. Public Hearing on Cable Franchise Agreement City Hall Council Chambers 4th Flr. 5:00 p.m. Testimony
Come out and be heard. Shows like Democracy Now! and other news / information / entertainment not regulated by mass-media cannot exist without Public Access.
GREAT NEWS!
ACORN, located at 16 West 25th Street, will provide a bus leaving at 3:00 p.m. to take ANYONE who wants to go to the Public Access Rally tomorrow. There is no charge for this service -- and no excuse for you not to be at the Rally! Free food will be provided. Have I convinced you yet?
As you all know by now, the Rally in front of City Hall tomorrow for Public Access is crucial to this issue. Speakers who have expereince with Public Access and who work in various communities within Baltimore will speak for 45 minutes until 4:45 p.m.
This hearing is particularly significant for Public Access, because it is the last hearing open to the public regarding Public Access. This is a last chance for EVERYONE to express their thoughts, opinions and ideas on how they feel about Public Access.
To give you an idea about how the hearing will progress:
First, there will be presentations from the City Council Law Department, Comcast Cable and Baltimore Grassroots Media. Each presentation will be between 15 - 20 minutes.
Second, the floor will be opened to public testimony. That means YOU!!
GREAT NEWS!
ACORN, located at 16 West 25th Street, will provide a bus leaving at 3:00 p.m. to take ANYONE who wants to go to the Public Access Rally tomorrow. There is no charge for this service -- and no excuse for you not to be at the Rally! Free food will be provided. Have I convinced you yet?
As you all know by now, the Rally in front of City Hall tomorrow for Public Access is crucial to this issue. Speakers who have expereince with Public Access and who work in various communities within Baltimore will speak for 45 minutes until 4:45 p.m.
This hearing is particularly significant for Public Access, because it is the last hearing open to the public regarding Public Access. This is a last chance for EVERYONE to express their thoughts, opinions and ideas on how they feel about Public Access.
To give you an idea about how the hearing will progress:
First, there will be presentations from the City Council Law Department, Comcast Cable and Baltimore Grassroots Media. Each presentation will be between 15 - 20 minutes.
Second, the floor will be opened to public testimony. That means YOU!!
Tuesday, October 12, 2004
Jack Germond lecture - Oct. 21
News from Johns Hopkins: Jack Germond lecture - Oct. 21
Amy Cowles amycowles@jhu.edu
10/12/2004,
Office of News and InformationJohns Hopkins University
901 S. Bond St./Suite 540
Baltimore, Md. 21231
Phone: 443-287-9960
October 12, 2004
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MEDIA CONTACT: Amy Cowles(443) 287-9960amycowles@jhu.edu JOURNALIST
JACK GERMOND TO SPEAK AT JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY
Political columnist and author Jack Germond will speak at 5 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 21, in the Shriver Hall Clipper Room on the Homewood campus of The Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N. Charles St. in Baltimore. The talk is part of the Press and Public Policy seminar series presented by The Johns Hopkins University Institute for Policy Studies. The series spotlights the common ground between those who study and those who report on domestic policy issues. New York Times senior writer Jason De Parle will speak at 5 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 4. Germond will share his thoughts about the domestic policy implications of the upcoming presidential elections. After his lecture,he will sign copies of his new book, Fat Man Fed Up: How American Politics Went Bad, (Random House, July 2004), which offers his observations on political discourse in the United States. Germond has covered every presidential campaign since 1960, according to the Baltimore Sun, where he was a columnist. Germond was also the Gannett bureau chief in Washington, and a columnist and editor for the Washington Star. He first appeared on "Meet the Press" in 1972 and has been a regular on the "Today Show," CNN, and "The McLaughlin Group." He now serves as a panelist on WUSA-TV's "Inside Washington" and writes occasional newspaper pieces.
For more info,visithttps://webmail.perfora.net/dereferer.php3?locate=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.randomhouse.com%2Frandomhouse%2Fauthors%2Fresults.pperl%3Fauthorid%3D9924%3Cbrhttps://webmail.perfora.net/dereferer.php3?locate=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.jhu.edu%2Fnews_info%2Fnews%2F
Information on automatic E-mail delivery of science and medical news releases is available at the same address.
Amy Cowles amycowles@jhu.edu
10/12/2004,
Office of News and InformationJohns Hopkins University
901 S. Bond St./Suite 540
Baltimore, Md. 21231
Phone: 443-287-9960
October 12, 2004
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MEDIA CONTACT: Amy Cowles(443) 287-9960amycowles@jhu.edu JOURNALIST
JACK GERMOND TO SPEAK AT JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY
Political columnist and author Jack Germond will speak at 5 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 21, in the Shriver Hall Clipper Room on the Homewood campus of The Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N. Charles St. in Baltimore. The talk is part of the Press and Public Policy seminar series presented by The Johns Hopkins University Institute for Policy Studies. The series spotlights the common ground between those who study and those who report on domestic policy issues. New York Times senior writer Jason De Parle will speak at 5 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 4. Germond will share his thoughts about the domestic policy implications of the upcoming presidential elections. After his lecture,he will sign copies of his new book, Fat Man Fed Up: How American Politics Went Bad, (Random House, July 2004), which offers his observations on political discourse in the United States. Germond has covered every presidential campaign since 1960, according to the Baltimore Sun, where he was a columnist. Germond was also the Gannett bureau chief in Washington, and a columnist and editor for the Washington Star. He first appeared on "Meet the Press" in 1972 and has been a regular on the "Today Show," CNN, and "The McLaughlin Group." He now serves as a panelist on WUSA-TV's "Inside Washington" and writes occasional newspaper pieces.
For more info,visithttps://webmail.perfora.net/dereferer.php3?locate=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.randomhouse.com%2Frandomhouse%2Fauthors%2Fresults.pperl%3Fauthorid%3D9924%3Cbrhttps://webmail.perfora.net/dereferer.php3?locate=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.jhu.edu%2Fnews_info%2Fnews%2F
Information on automatic E-mail delivery of science and medical news releases is available at the same address.
Monday, October 11, 2004
Baltimore, Maryland, October 2004: Everyone needs to vote the current Comcast public access TV proposal down
SUBJECT: Baltimore's public access TV battle with Comcast is important to every county in Maryland.
Why is it so important to all of Maryland's communities? Because if Baltimore gets a good deal with sufficient funding from Comcast this time around, as it is contract time again, this will set the precedent for the kind of a deal that every county can get for their citizens. That is why as a new volunteer with Baltimore Grassroots Media, the group at the forefront of fighting the battle of getting the citizens of Baltimore a good public access deal, I've personally decided to contribute this particular email tactic of letting a lot of top government people from all over the state know of this so that they can keep their eyes on it, confer with each other about it, and maybe also be helpfully influential in the current Baltimore battle.I've sent this message to the Governor and to many other people near the top of his administration, as well as to many people at the top of each county government. After making sure that I had selected a lot of top officials in each particular government, I then only randomly selected some other folks further down, and in various departments, inclusive of legal ones. I've also sent it to colleges and universities all over Maryland, as well as to various other people and organizations. To protect everyone's privacy, I've sent each message to myself and a blind carbon copy to each of the few email addresses that I send off each time so that they don't show (by the way, my browser limits me to sending no more than 10 at a time). Of course here in Baltimore, and starting with the Mayor and his administration, and every member of the City Counsel, the team that will either make a good or bad deal with Comcast, I've sent this to every person in charge of all the departments that I found that were listed on a Baltimore City "Executive Branch" page that I got with a goggle search. I've also sent it to many more Baltimore government people in various departments and agencies on other pages that I found in the search. What is found below is what was contained in two prior mailings of mine in the last few days. The subject-heading of the first email, and the two paragraphs of lead-in comments, was to the "Association of Maryland Nonprofit Organizations", which leads in to my first mailing to the print, TV and radio media organizations that I showed them, which speaks a lot about the contract situation between the City Council of Baltimore and the Comcast cable TV company, and contains ideas and information that everyone in every Maryland county should know about, be thinking of, and considering for their own communities. Hopefully all you folks who did get this message will pass it on to others who didn't.============================
--------Subject: A call for "HELP" to the "Association of Maryland NonprofitOrganizations"-----
---Dear Mr. Berns, and all other staff members (all 29 of you who are listed on page 5 of my 2004 "Membership Directory"). I'm John DeSantis, a member who is listed on page 160 in the "Emerging Nonprofits" section. I've sent this to each of you in separate e-mails, so that you could confer with each other on my important request for some immediate helpful action on your part for the city of Baltimore concerning public access TV with the Comcast cable company, which every single nonprofit organization has a very strong stake in. Why? Because if Baltimore city gets the "public access" TV deal that it needs, then the precedent will be set for a similar arrangement to be made between every single Maryland county and the Comcast company. I notice that there are over 3,000 nonprofit organizations in Baltimore City alone, and over 18,000 in all of the counties of Baltimore listed under the "Nonprofits By The Numbers" chart on page 2. So after reading what is below, if you all confer and come to think that it's a worthwhile cause to immediately get involved with, besides possibly doing some other things, if you simply send an e-mail to every one of your thousands of members, and maybe even to those nonprofit organizations who aren't yet members, maybe many of them will rise to the occasion and motivate some of their people to get involved in some way this week, as explained below in a copy of the exact message that I sent out yesterday (Saturday) to many media organizations in the Baltimore area. The first line below is what was in the subject heading.================
--------Subject: Everyone needs to vote the current Comcast public access TV proposal down---
-----This is a RUSH ALERT, a call to quick and decisive coordinated action: Every Baltimore citizen and every media organization needs to quickly come together and let the mayor and the City Council know that the proposed Public Access TV contract by Comcast is not in any way good enough and should be firmly rejected so that it can then be negotiated and made much better. Dear print, TV and radio media folks (I'm sending this off to many Baltimore media organizations, one by one, or placing them in "forms"where no direct media e-mail address is available): Please consider using all or parts of the various paragraphs that I have composed above and below simply as starting ideas, as rough unedited raw starting material to work with in any way that you want to. I most sincerely thank you all in advance for considering it in order to get involved. Please know that I'm an amateur at writing and that the various ideas are presented in no specific order in my rush to put this letter together. I've numbered the eleven paragraphs found below for any possible convenience to anyone. (My name, address, and home phone number is found at the end, as well as four links to some pertinent information concerning this issue.)========================
(1) Comcast will naturally gain a lot more Baltimore city customers if public access is funded because young and old people, families, non-profit and religious organizations, and businesses will want their friends, families, organizational members, and customers and potential customers to see the shows that are produced and presented, as well as sponsored. Comcast may not be thinking about or seriously considering this very important factor.
(2) City Counsel members who do not vote to make Comcast pay each and every year for a strong public access presence will steadily have their non-support of the community highlighted, loud and clear, to the community of people who's votes they need at each election period -- as well as to the media. The few thousand dollars of Comcast contributions that any Council members may get in order to back their non-support (or very meager support) could prove to be very costly in the end: as far as votes by citizens are concerned.
(3) A city the size and stature of Baltimore should not be treated in this denigrating, non-caring, and selfish way; especially because of the enormous amount of money that Comcast makes off of its citizens each year -- your constituents! You are the elected folks who can do either the right or the wrong thing for our city.
(4) Public Access TV is a very fair and very respectful UNITING social factor in these few very important ways (among many others): every person, rich or poor, every small or large non-profit organization, every religious organization, every race and ethnic group, every nationality, and so on, are all treated the same concerning everything that has to do with their dealings with public access TV and the people who work within it.
(5) A properly funded public access TV channel, with adequate facilities, staff, training, and equipment (not as our current unfunded public access channel that is without a staff or decent equipment), will offer great benefit to our youth in giving them an ongoing and non-stop creative and constructive outlet and will help reduce crime, among many other positive things for our city, like, just for example: allowing them to showcase their many different talents in sports and entertainment; allowing them to express their views on talk shows that they or others create around every important social, political, educational, and economic subject. Adults and businesses can sponsor and provide rewards of all types to winners in all kinds of contests(sports, educational, entertainment, debate, etc.)
(6) Everyone in our Baltimore community, somehow organized by the media, should brainstorm together and come up with a long sample list of the very many and various kinds of shows that can be produced once we have a real and well funded public access staff and facilities -- and especially for the youth of our city, inclusive of, and adequate to, all of their different age groups. We should also bring this idea up to the City Council members.
(7) With the wonderful "Baltimore Believe" idea in mind, I was inspired to write this after reading the "Planned TV deal raises concern" article in the Maryland section of THE SUN newspaper on September 8th. Why? Because we should all believe in this battle that the public access advocates from Baltimore Grassroots Media are conducting on behalf of all of us, and wholeheartedly support their quest for the proper funding of public access TV because it absolutely includes every citizen and every institution and organization: schools, small and large non-profit groups and charities, religious organizations, businesses, social justice movements, youth and senior citizen organizations, entertainers, artists, poets, actors, writers, and so on. Everyone, no matter what their ideas, reasons, or production formats, would be able to produce video tapes of shows to air on public access TV if they ever wanted to-- once in a while or regularly.
(8) The very crucial and important "Public Access / Comcast City Council hearing" is scheduled for Wednesday, October 13th at City Hall. Everyone should rally to the occasion and, in many ways, let all of Baltimore's government leaders know how we want them to vote on this issue and/or the kind of financial deal that they should make with the Comcast cable TV company in order to strongly support funding public access TV --all-inclusive of the studio spaces and the equipment that everyone would be able to use in making their tapes, along with the necessary training classes that would teach us all how to do everything necessary.
(9) As many citizens and organizations as possible, as well as media people, should attend the rally that is scheduled to be outside of City Hall at 4:00 P.M., an hour before the hearing, in order to make our united presence and voice seen and heard, loud and crystal clear. This rally is organized by BGM, the Baltimore Grassroots Media organization (which my wife, Bonnie Hurwitz, and I are very new volunteers with), whose volunteer members, as well as people and organizations who support what they are fighting for, will be speaking at the hearing.
(10) We should all be strongly united, even those of us who would never actually create a show to put on the air, and "Believe" that an important city like Baltimore should not continue to be without sufficient funds and facilities necessary for providing this very important service and system for all of its citizens and organizations to use and communicate through. We should hope and expect, and even demand, loud and clear, that our leaders will negotiate a deal with Comcast where they have to ante up sufficiently, year in and year out, since they make big money from our citizens every year.
(11) Finally: Thanks for reading and absorbing it all. I did my humble best (four informative links are found below). But hopefully others, as well as those who are much more knowledgeable than me concerning this whole public access subject, and who know how to skillfully deal with politicians, as well as being more skillful in writing and presenting ideas, will add many more ideas and subjects for everyone to both consider and draw from, to use as ammunition to express ourselves when we get involved in whatever ways each of us do.
Most sincerely,
John DeSantis
1113 Scotts Hill Drive
Baltimore, MD 21208
(410) 484-1987
-------Citys Proposed Cable Contract Lacks Public Access TV Provisions:http://baltimorechronicle.com/090904BradCarlton.shtml
Baltimore Grassroots Media:http://www.baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org
Baltimore Public Access Media News Wire: http://baltimorepublicaccessnewswire.blogspot.com
Baltimore Public Access Television Channel 5 Volunteer Website:http://www.bpatv.org/bcpa_tv.html
Why is it so important to all of Maryland's communities? Because if Baltimore gets a good deal with sufficient funding from Comcast this time around, as it is contract time again, this will set the precedent for the kind of a deal that every county can get for their citizens. That is why as a new volunteer with Baltimore Grassroots Media, the group at the forefront of fighting the battle of getting the citizens of Baltimore a good public access deal, I've personally decided to contribute this particular email tactic of letting a lot of top government people from all over the state know of this so that they can keep their eyes on it, confer with each other about it, and maybe also be helpfully influential in the current Baltimore battle.I've sent this message to the Governor and to many other people near the top of his administration, as well as to many people at the top of each county government. After making sure that I had selected a lot of top officials in each particular government, I then only randomly selected some other folks further down, and in various departments, inclusive of legal ones. I've also sent it to colleges and universities all over Maryland, as well as to various other people and organizations. To protect everyone's privacy, I've sent each message to myself and a blind carbon copy to each of the few email addresses that I send off each time so that they don't show (by the way, my browser limits me to sending no more than 10 at a time). Of course here in Baltimore, and starting with the Mayor and his administration, and every member of the City Counsel, the team that will either make a good or bad deal with Comcast, I've sent this to every person in charge of all the departments that I found that were listed on a Baltimore City "Executive Branch" page that I got with a goggle search. I've also sent it to many more Baltimore government people in various departments and agencies on other pages that I found in the search. What is found below is what was contained in two prior mailings of mine in the last few days. The subject-heading of the first email, and the two paragraphs of lead-in comments, was to the "Association of Maryland Nonprofit Organizations", which leads in to my first mailing to the print, TV and radio media organizations that I showed them, which speaks a lot about the contract situation between the City Council of Baltimore and the Comcast cable TV company, and contains ideas and information that everyone in every Maryland county should know about, be thinking of, and considering for their own communities. Hopefully all you folks who did get this message will pass it on to others who didn't.============================
--------Subject: A call for "HELP" to the "Association of Maryland NonprofitOrganizations"-----
---Dear Mr. Berns, and all other staff members (all 29 of you who are listed on page 5 of my 2004 "Membership Directory"). I'm John DeSantis, a member who is listed on page 160 in the "Emerging Nonprofits" section. I've sent this to each of you in separate e-mails, so that you could confer with each other on my important request for some immediate helpful action on your part for the city of Baltimore concerning public access TV with the Comcast cable company, which every single nonprofit organization has a very strong stake in. Why? Because if Baltimore city gets the "public access" TV deal that it needs, then the precedent will be set for a similar arrangement to be made between every single Maryland county and the Comcast company. I notice that there are over 3,000 nonprofit organizations in Baltimore City alone, and over 18,000 in all of the counties of Baltimore listed under the "Nonprofits By The Numbers" chart on page 2. So after reading what is below, if you all confer and come to think that it's a worthwhile cause to immediately get involved with, besides possibly doing some other things, if you simply send an e-mail to every one of your thousands of members, and maybe even to those nonprofit organizations who aren't yet members, maybe many of them will rise to the occasion and motivate some of their people to get involved in some way this week, as explained below in a copy of the exact message that I sent out yesterday (Saturday) to many media organizations in the Baltimore area. The first line below is what was in the subject heading.================
--------Subject: Everyone needs to vote the current Comcast public access TV proposal down---
-----This is a RUSH ALERT, a call to quick and decisive coordinated action: Every Baltimore citizen and every media organization needs to quickly come together and let the mayor and the City Council know that the proposed Public Access TV contract by Comcast is not in any way good enough and should be firmly rejected so that it can then be negotiated and made much better. Dear print, TV and radio media folks (I'm sending this off to many Baltimore media organizations, one by one, or placing them in "forms"where no direct media e-mail address is available): Please consider using all or parts of the various paragraphs that I have composed above and below simply as starting ideas, as rough unedited raw starting material to work with in any way that you want to. I most sincerely thank you all in advance for considering it in order to get involved. Please know that I'm an amateur at writing and that the various ideas are presented in no specific order in my rush to put this letter together. I've numbered the eleven paragraphs found below for any possible convenience to anyone. (My name, address, and home phone number is found at the end, as well as four links to some pertinent information concerning this issue.)========================
(1) Comcast will naturally gain a lot more Baltimore city customers if public access is funded because young and old people, families, non-profit and religious organizations, and businesses will want their friends, families, organizational members, and customers and potential customers to see the shows that are produced and presented, as well as sponsored. Comcast may not be thinking about or seriously considering this very important factor.
(2) City Counsel members who do not vote to make Comcast pay each and every year for a strong public access presence will steadily have their non-support of the community highlighted, loud and clear, to the community of people who's votes they need at each election period -- as well as to the media. The few thousand dollars of Comcast contributions that any Council members may get in order to back their non-support (or very meager support) could prove to be very costly in the end: as far as votes by citizens are concerned.
(3) A city the size and stature of Baltimore should not be treated in this denigrating, non-caring, and selfish way; especially because of the enormous amount of money that Comcast makes off of its citizens each year -- your constituents! You are the elected folks who can do either the right or the wrong thing for our city.
(4) Public Access TV is a very fair and very respectful UNITING social factor in these few very important ways (among many others): every person, rich or poor, every small or large non-profit organization, every religious organization, every race and ethnic group, every nationality, and so on, are all treated the same concerning everything that has to do with their dealings with public access TV and the people who work within it.
(5) A properly funded public access TV channel, with adequate facilities, staff, training, and equipment (not as our current unfunded public access channel that is without a staff or decent equipment), will offer great benefit to our youth in giving them an ongoing and non-stop creative and constructive outlet and will help reduce crime, among many other positive things for our city, like, just for example: allowing them to showcase their many different talents in sports and entertainment; allowing them to express their views on talk shows that they or others create around every important social, political, educational, and economic subject. Adults and businesses can sponsor and provide rewards of all types to winners in all kinds of contests(sports, educational, entertainment, debate, etc.)
(6) Everyone in our Baltimore community, somehow organized by the media, should brainstorm together and come up with a long sample list of the very many and various kinds of shows that can be produced once we have a real and well funded public access staff and facilities -- and especially for the youth of our city, inclusive of, and adequate to, all of their different age groups. We should also bring this idea up to the City Council members.
(7) With the wonderful "Baltimore Believe" idea in mind, I was inspired to write this after reading the "Planned TV deal raises concern" article in the Maryland section of THE SUN newspaper on September 8th. Why? Because we should all believe in this battle that the public access advocates from Baltimore Grassroots Media are conducting on behalf of all of us, and wholeheartedly support their quest for the proper funding of public access TV because it absolutely includes every citizen and every institution and organization: schools, small and large non-profit groups and charities, religious organizations, businesses, social justice movements, youth and senior citizen organizations, entertainers, artists, poets, actors, writers, and so on. Everyone, no matter what their ideas, reasons, or production formats, would be able to produce video tapes of shows to air on public access TV if they ever wanted to-- once in a while or regularly.
(8) The very crucial and important "Public Access / Comcast City Council hearing" is scheduled for Wednesday, October 13th at City Hall. Everyone should rally to the occasion and, in many ways, let all of Baltimore's government leaders know how we want them to vote on this issue and/or the kind of financial deal that they should make with the Comcast cable TV company in order to strongly support funding public access TV --all-inclusive of the studio spaces and the equipment that everyone would be able to use in making their tapes, along with the necessary training classes that would teach us all how to do everything necessary.
(9) As many citizens and organizations as possible, as well as media people, should attend the rally that is scheduled to be outside of City Hall at 4:00 P.M., an hour before the hearing, in order to make our united presence and voice seen and heard, loud and crystal clear. This rally is organized by BGM, the Baltimore Grassroots Media organization (which my wife, Bonnie Hurwitz, and I are very new volunteers with), whose volunteer members, as well as people and organizations who support what they are fighting for, will be speaking at the hearing.
(10) We should all be strongly united, even those of us who would never actually create a show to put on the air, and "Believe" that an important city like Baltimore should not continue to be without sufficient funds and facilities necessary for providing this very important service and system for all of its citizens and organizations to use and communicate through. We should hope and expect, and even demand, loud and clear, that our leaders will negotiate a deal with Comcast where they have to ante up sufficiently, year in and year out, since they make big money from our citizens every year.
(11) Finally: Thanks for reading and absorbing it all. I did my humble best (four informative links are found below). But hopefully others, as well as those who are much more knowledgeable than me concerning this whole public access subject, and who know how to skillfully deal with politicians, as well as being more skillful in writing and presenting ideas, will add many more ideas and subjects for everyone to both consider and draw from, to use as ammunition to express ourselves when we get involved in whatever ways each of us do.
Most sincerely,
John DeSantis
1113 Scotts Hill Drive
Baltimore, MD 21208
(410) 484-1987
-------Citys Proposed Cable Contract Lacks Public Access TV Provisions:http://baltimorechronicle.com/090904BradCarlton.shtml
Baltimore Grassroots Media:http://www.baltimoregrassrootsmedia.org
Baltimore Public Access Media News Wire: http://baltimorepublicaccessnewswire.blogspot.com
Baltimore Public Access Television Channel 5 Volunteer Website:http://www.bpatv.org/bcpa_tv.html
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