FCC Grants WBCR Full-Power License

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GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — The Federal Communications Commission has granted a full-power broadcast license to WBCR-LP 97.7 FM, the all-volunteer low-power community radio station based here.

The station applied for the license last year, when the FCC provided a rare opportunity for the licensing of non-commercial radio stations.

Besides allowing WBCR-LP to broadcast a much more powerful signal covering a larger geographic area, the full-power designation also removes the risk that the community radio station could be "bumped" from its frequency sometime in the
future by the expansion of a nearby full-power station. The station will be able to broadcast into parts of three states.

WBCR-LP and its volunteer members now have a three-year window to raise funds and make necessary upgrades to the station’s equipment to begin broadcasting with a stronger signal, at the new frequency of 89.5 FM and most likely with new
call letters as well. The station’s over-the-air broadcast signal currently reaches only a few miles outside of Great Barrington; the new signal will extend north through Pittsfield, throughout most of Columbia County to the west, east to Westfield and south
throughout much of northwestern Connecticut.


A committee of station volunteers is creating a business plan with projected costs of the transition. Necessary engineering services and equipment upgrades needed for the switch are expected to be a significant expense, with the station’s fixed running costs doubling or tripling from the current level of $3,500 per month. Other committees will grapple with issues relating to maintaining the station’s community and identity while dealing with new programming and connecting with a more expansive geographic area.

The station plans a publicity campaign is to introduce itself to its potential new broadcast area, and to recruit new volunteers and programmers.

In the meantime, the station continues to broadcast its low-power signal at 97.7 FM and streams worldwide at berkshireradio.org.

WBCR-LP is operated by the Berkshire Community Radio Alliance, Inc., a 501(c)(3) non-profit membership organization. The station has no paid staff, is committed to community access to the media, and allows anyone who wishes to be on the radio the opportunity to have a radio program.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Dalton Considers Digitization of Records

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
DALTON, Mass. — The town is exploring digitizing its records to improve documents organization and accessibility, while reducing the need for physical storage space.
 
Digitization and storage is an issue that the town encounters, more often than they would like, and has become increasingly apparent through the ongoing work of the Stormwater Management Commission, Chair Thomas Irwin told the Select Board in April.
 
"[The commission has] repeatedly struggled to determine what documents exist, access past commission records, and identify a secure searchable location for records we continue to generate," he said. 
 
Currently, the town's Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) documents are primarily stored on a Google documents account managed on a Berkshire Regional Planning Commission computer and, to a lesser extent, the stormwater management webpage, Irwin said.
 
"For obvious reasons, this is concerning. As Dalton moves toward full MS4 compliance, both the number and the size of these records will increase," he said.
 
He estimated that the stormwater commission alone will initially store at least 50 documents, but the issue extends farther than this department. 
 
"Recently, the Planning Board spent many hours searching for the east of the pond drawing and the 1992 land court decision related to Crane and Company, Petricca Industries Inc., and the Town of Dalton," Irwin said. 
 
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