"We are in one of the poorest if not the poorest districts of the country, said Ricky Baker, of the private community action Council, which receives 95 percent of its funding by the Federal Government, into the microphone." Without that money he added "must we humans die either freezing, starving to death or to a disease to death, because they can receive adequate health care."
Mr. Kirby refrain from chiming in this his own employer, WMMT, is threatened by the same budget AX. Lawmakers try to billions of dollars in federal spending cut, voted in the Republican controlled House in February to end funding for the Corporation for public broadcasting in the year 2013. While President Obama still wants to finance the Corporation, budget of its long-term fate uncertain left the current turbulence.
The wrapping of a radio signal like luxury nebeneinandergestelltem against other hardships in the Appalachian mountains. But WMMT coal fields and hollows of eastern Kentucky, southwestern Virginia and southern West Virginia reached over the mountains, created an connective tissue for the widely-dispersed, geographically isolated listeners. There are also recreation of everyday life. How the Redbud trees in purple patches along the double-headed arrow hang here begin burst, the sounds from the radio, if not essential, might at least life-affirming.
"Phew, that young UN is a series of pipes on it, has" Andy Shepherd, a former federal Marshal, now a D.J. at the train station, told listeners last week, when he his show with a melody of Ardetta Meade wrapped.
Mr Shepherd and his wife, Cathy ("the biscuit burners"), share a three-hour program, the features of bluegrass, traditional country and their own playful patterns. Mrs. Shepherd speaks to multiple listeners, of which many homebound only to Black Peter off-air to are.
Mayor James Wiley craft, a Democrat, said in an interview that the station features served important communications. It much more quickly than city officials could have alerted residents on an oil slick, the impact on their drinking water.
"If this station due to lack of funding will be shut down, it would really, really hurts this city," said Mr craft.
Even a competitor has kind words for WMMT.
"they fill a void that fill commercial stations can not," said G. C. Kincer, who once in the possession of several such stations in the area but has reduced to one and who is also Mayor of nearby Jenkins. Commercial operators are their advertisers, ruled he said while make is not in the listener surveys, WMMT, on his notions of what people want.
Mr Kincer said "I them constantly hear".
The Corporation for public broadcasting distributed 420 million in the previous year 1,300 public television and radio stations across the country. There were WMMT, which is $256,000 radio or a University, $86,000 or one-third of the budget of the channel with national public.
Rural radio stations are far more dependent on federal funds than their urban counterparts and rather go, if it is cut. Almost two dozen rural stations, many of them on Indian reservations, rely on Corporation financing for at least 50 percent of their revenue. (On the other hand, grants from the Corporation and other federal agencies provide NPR 2 percent total sales revenue.)
Rural stations are additional challenges. You need several channels to reach widely scattered areas. And the listener are often fixed income with little or even to donate no discretionary money, especially in a down economy.
"This is the worst threat we've ever had, because the economic climate is different, so bad for everything," said Jim Webb, 65, the "Appalachian attitude," hosts with local and regional musicians.
WMMT is one of the few stations that still live, provide your own programs, music and news, around the clock, except for the early hours of the morning, if it repeated its hosts musical playlists. The station has four full-time and three part-time workers and more than 50 volunteers, of which many host shows and carry their own recordings.
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