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PCTV Outlines Asks for New Cable Contract

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Pittsfield Community Television broadcasts 20,000 hours of city programming and its cable contract asks are seen as reasonable.

The Cable Advisory Committee heard PCTV’s ascertainment report on Thursday ahead of contract negotiations with Charter Spectrum.  The panel will soon review a draft request for a proposal for the cable company.

Board President Sue Doucette and Operations Manager David Cachat laid out the community television station’s requests in the next 10-year contract.

These include: continuing to receive the federal maximum level of five percent of gross annual cable revenues for Pittsfield, securing capital funding, having all programming provided in high definition, being carried on every video streaming service offered, occupying lower channels, and maintaining fiber optics connections between PCTV’s facilities and the cable headend.

Aside from its main facility on Frederico Drive, the television station also has 17 live origination points around the city.

"They don't seem unreasonable to me," Chair Sara Hathaway said.

In the last contract, PCTV was given $313,000 for the capital fund and over the last decade, has added over $650,000 of its own money to it.  It is estimated that $1,991,000 is necessary to continue to provide a level of technical quality and to replace the existing facilities over the next decade.

"The total value of the active equipment in our inventory right now based on the purchase price is $1.725 million. That's everything that is actively in use right now," Cachat reported, explaining that prices fluctuate and "therefore $1.9 million isn’t outrageous."

Some equipment costs over $50,000 alone.

The television station would also like a couple of direct technical assistance contacts that can be reached in a timely manner when there is a problem and a small blurb and PCTV on Spectrum’s other channels.

PCTV, founded in 1986, has a mission to "empower our community to create media and amplify diverse voices through the best technology and wide-reaching platforms" and a vision that "everyone in our area should have access to shared media experiences which inform, educate, engage, and entertain, that foster civic and community engagement, and promote transparency in local government."


It has three public education and government channels: "Access Pittsfield," channel 1301; "Pittsfield ETV," channel 1302; and "Citylink," channel 1303.  With channel numbers below 50, the television station feels that it will be more accessible.

The channels showcase everything from member-produced programming to sports, governmental meetings, and special events.

"The thing we were proud of is we never closed for one day during COVID and we never stopped carrying programming," Cachat explained, adding that PCTV did 184 live press conferences from the governor and weekly updates from the mayor.

An average of about 250 meetings are covered per year and PCTV as well as debates and candidate statements for elections that pertain to the city.

"To me, the thing about PCTV broadcasting meetings is they can watch it and they can hear all the words for themselves and decide for themselves what said person meant," Doucette said. "They don't have to rely on somebody else's interpretation."

Hathaway said this was heard "over and over" again during focus group sessions "and not only the people who are watching but the people who are in the meetings. They want the public to know what they're doing."

Last month, council chambers were filled to the brim during a public hearing held by the commission.  People gushed about PCTV for more than 90 minutes, highlighting the importance of Pittsfield's local television station and its overwhelmingly positive impact.

In other news, the committee will ask Mayor Peter Marchetti to submit detailed reporting for the franchise fees.  The current license states that Spectrum is required to provide quarterly reports detailing the source of the franchise funding and the city has not received a full breakdown report since 2019.
 


Tags: cable television,   PCTV,   

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Tina Packer, Founder of Shakespeare & Company, Dies at 87

Staff Reports
LENOX, Mass. — The doyenne of Shakespeare's plays, Tina Packer, died Friday at the age of 87.
 
Shakespeare & Company, which Packer co-founded in 1978, made the announcement Saturday on its Facebook page.
 
"It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of Tina Packer, Shakespeare & Company's founding artistic director and acclaimed director, actor, writer, and teacher," the company said on its post and in a press release. 
 
Packer, who retired a the theater company's artistic director in 2009, had directed all of Shakespeare's plays, some several times, acted in eight of them, and taught the whole canon at more than 30 colleges, including Harvard. She continued to direct, teach, and advocate for the company until her passing.
 
At Columbia University, she taught in the master of business administration program for four years, resulting in the publication of "Power Plays: Shakespeare's Lessons in Leadership and Management with Deming Professor John Whitney" for Simon and Schuster. For Scholastic, she wrote "Tales from Shakespeare," a children's book and recipient of the Parent's Gold Medal Award. 
 
Most recently her book "Women of Will" was published by Knopf and she had been performing "Women of Will" with Nigel Gore, in New York, Mexico, England, The Hague, China, and across the United States. She's the recipient of numerous awards and honorary degrees, including the Commonwealth Award.
 
"Our hearts are heavy with the passing of Tina Packer, a fiery force of nature with an indomitable spirit," said Artistic Director Allyn Burrows. "Tina affected everyone she encountered with her warmth, generosity, wit, and insatiable curiosity. She delighted in people's stories, and reached into their hearts with tender humanity. The world was her stage, and she furthered the Berkshires as a destination for the imagination. 
 
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