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The Five Farms: Stories from American Families

A new public radio series called THE FIVE FARMS makes the connection for listeners between the food on their tables and the families who work to produce it.

Click Here to find out more!

 

Archived Articles
Traci L. Morris, NPM Policy Analyst blogs on Tribal Telecom
Friday, 11 February 2011 09:52
Traci L. Morris, NPM Policy and Program Analyst, blogs for NAMAC on Tribal Telecommunications. Read the full article at:  Tribal Telecom Blog
 
Native Public Media Five Year Anniversary
Wednesday, 17 February 2010 08:26

On September 15, 2009 Native Public Media celebrated its Five Year Anniversary by honoring the contributions of our pro bono policy team! Watch the video to learn more about these stellar individuals and help us keep up the momentum! Join our pro bono policy team or donate today and be part of a growing movement to build a robust, accessible media system for all Native Americans!

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Click here to see the photo album from this event.

 
Tribal Radio
Tuesday, 07 July 2009 16:25

Indian Highway 2, On the Rez

Jesse Hardman and Maura O'Connor recently drove around the southwestern United States visiting some of the 33 Native radio stations, read and listen to their story on Transom.org

 
Native Public Media works to bring ubiquitous open broadband to Native America
Monday, 16 March 2009 02:51

Broadband penetration on Indian lands is estimated at less than 10%.  Eliminating barriers to broadband investment, deployment and adoption is critical to Native nations’ ability to secure their homelands, educate their citizens, and maintain growing economies. 

As part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, the U.S. Congress has established a Broadband Technology Opportunities Program to develop and expand broadband services to rural and underserved areas and improve access to broadband by public safety agencies. Funding will be available to encourage sustainable adoption of broadband services, to upgrade technology and capacity at public computing centers, and to develop and maintain statewide broadband inventory maps.

As Native Public Media carries out its mission to promote healthy, engaged, independent Native communities by strengthening and expanding Native American media capacity, it will be actively involved in the BTOP to create access to spectrum based opportunities for Native America.

Complete information is available at

More information

www.ntia.doc.gov/press/2009/BTOP_RFI_090310.pdf

 
Grow the Audience for Public Radio
Wednesday, 11 February 2009 00:15

Recently,  Station Resource Group, a resource and advocacy organization that works to help America's strongest public radio stations better serve the public and thrive during a period of radical change asked NPM Executive Director Loris Taylor to offer a Native perspective on Grow the Audience --   a broad-based effort to shape shared strategies, compelling goals, and results-oriented implementation plans that will widen the use and deepen the value of public radio.

 

Loris joined a distinguished Task Force of station, network, and philanthropic leaders; working groups of program decision makers and producers framing key proposals and options; thought leaders writing comments and essays to push our thinking. The project, which is funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Read more about what smart thinkers across public radio think about the possibilities ahead of us and the changes we need to make if we are to widen the use and deepen the value of public radio's service.

http://www.srg.org/GTA/GTAThinking.html

 
Youth Radio - Frequency of the future
Tuesday, 10 February 2009 23:57

Youth Radio Tour with Executive Director Jacinda AbcarianNative Public Media staff met on January 26 and 27 in Oakland, CA at Youth Radio --- nationally and internationally known as a cutting edge youth development and media organization that weaves the fast end of the “digital curve” with best practices and innovation in community based education.

As soon as you walk in the door of this 20,000 sq. ft. former bank building, you are aware that this is no ordinary media training center. First, you encounter a wall full of awards including a George Foster Peabody Award, two Edward R. Murrow Awards and the Alfred I. DuPont/Columbia University Award for Excellence in Broadcast Journalism as well as several from NFCB. Then your eyes start to take in the state-of-the-art equipment being utilized by extremely focused and determined youth.

Youth Radio StudentThe heart and soul of Youth Radio is to train young people from under-resourced public schools, community-based organizations, group homes and juvenile detention centers in broadcast journalism, media production and cutting-edge technology. Professional development and technical skills training are offered absolutely free of charge with the aim of preparing young people for pathways to meaningful careers. We were happy to meet 21-year old Shaw Killup from Oakland who is involved in the Community Action Program. He's Navajo, Arapaho, and Shoshone.

Jacinda Abcarian and Kai Aiyetoro

Youth Radio currently trains 1,300 youth each year to develop core competencies in audio, video, web and print and to produce the highest quality original media for the widest range of mainstream outlets. Its reporters are heard worldwide through radio, video and the Internet and through print media.

 

To learn more about how your community can adopt a Youth Radio model, contact Jacinda Abcarian, Executive Director who was once an intern at WRFG-FM in Atlanta where she worked with Native Public Media’s Finance Director Kai Aiyetoro. Small world!

 
Permits in hand for 33 new Native stations
Friday, 16 January 2009 10:28

STORY UPDATE: As of March 31, 2009,  33 construction Permits have been granted by the FCC

On the Rez: Permits in hand for 29 new Native stations
Originally published in
Current, Nov. 24, 2008
By Dru Sefton and Steve Behrens

Native American public radio stations will nearly double in number if tribes and nonprofits are able to build the 29 or more that have received FCC construction permits. There were already 33 Native-controlled stations, mostly on reservations.

Sites range geographically from the Ka’u district of Hawaii’s big island, licensed to a nonprofit in Hilo, to northeastern Minnesota, licensed to a Chippewa tribal band (list below). Twenty-one of the 29 CPs are held by tribal governments, said Loris Ann Taylor, executive director of Native Public Media.

Among the future listeners: Native Alaskans in dozens of tiny subsistence villages where people catch, smoke and dry salmon on the roadless tundra and where the radio plays constantly in the general store, according to Ron Daugherty, g.m. of KYUK-AM in Bethel. The Bethel station snagged seven CPs for FM repeaters to reach the villages.

Taylor said last week she continues to hear of additional CPs granted, as the commission grinds out approvals following up on its first-in-years application opportunity in October 2007.

Thirty-seven Native American groups filed 58 applications for stations during the free-for-all a year ago. Some found there were no unused FM frequencies available in their vicinities, especially in more densely populated areas, Taylor said.

“It raises the issue of inclusion,” she told Current, noting that there are more than 500 federally recognized Native American nations. She suggested that federal policymakers take steps to bring broadband Internet service to those and other rural regions, for Native Americans and others.

“When you have certain tribes that are locked out and in saturated markets,” Taylor said, “it makes a great deal of sense to make sure they are on the broadband highway.”

Where reservations have stations, listeners really tune in. “They’re hearing news about who died, who was born, what celebrations are happening,” Taylor said.

In the White Mountain Apache reservation of east central Arizona, she said, almost every community member listens to KNNB.

Daugherty, g.m. of Bethel’s KYUK—“Right now there’s four inches of snow, it’s a clear blue sky with an ambient temperature of 16 below,” he says—is pleased to offer his listeners new services. Bethel Broadcasting will use seven of its CPs for new FM repeaters, one for a new FM service in Bethel and one to replace an existing translator.

Tribes from Bethel to Hawaii and across America joined forces in the campaign for FM frequencies.

John Crigler, an attorney who has been working with Native radio efforts since 1981, said Native Public Media coordinated “the first effort I know of to try to organize that world.”

“Tribes, like nonprofits, are generally used to working in isolation,” Crigler observes.

NPM, affiliated with the National Federation of Community Broadcasters, said last week it is expanding its efforts to assist Native groups in using broadband as well as broadcast hookups.

The group reassigned its director of station services, Peggy Berryhill (Muscogee Creek), to serve as director of media architecture, overseeing the expanded effort. Berryhill broke ground years ago as a Native American producer at NPR and as p.d. for pubradio stations in San Francisco; Berkeley, Calif., and Albuquerque, N.M.

Camille Lacapa (Hopi-Tewa), formerly station and audience relations manager of Native Voice One, the pubradio satellite network, was appointed NPM’s network services manager. She was station manager of WOJB-FM in Reserve, Wis., from 1995 to 2005.

Taylor said tribes are finding their own mixes of funding for the stations. Some will apply for Public Telecommunications Facilities Program matching grants.


Unofficial list of CPs received

The 29 construction permits tallied by Taylor so far were given to 19 organizations in these regions:

Alaska and Hawaii: Bethel Broadcasting Inc., Bethel, Alaska (9 CPs); Haola Inc., Hilo, Hawaii; Hoonah City School District, Hoonah, Alaska; Kotzebue Broadcasting Inc., Kotzebue, Alaska.

Midwest: Bois Forte Tribal Council, Nett Lake, Minn.; Corporation for Native Broadcasting, Sisseton, S.D.; Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa, Cloquet, Minn.; Native American Community Board Inc., Lake Andes, S.D.; Rosebud Sioux Tribe, Rosebud, S.D.; Santee Sioux Nation, Niobrara, Neb.

Southwest: Cherokee Nation, Tehlequah, Okla.; Dine College, Tsaile, Ariz.; Navaho Technical College, Crownpoint, N.M.

West: Chippewa Cree Tribe of the Rocky Boy’s Reservation, Elder, Mont.; Fremont County School District No. 21, Fort Washakie, Wyo.; Karuk Tribe of California (2 CPs), Happy Camp, Calif.; Kute Inc., Ignacio, Colo.; Native Media Resource Center, Gualala, Calif.

 See detailed list here...

 
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