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By James Gluso
Centralia-Chehalis Television will no longer have financial support
from the city of Centralia after May 18, but the public access channel's
board members don't intend to let that stop them. The board voted
unanimously Tuesday to continue producing programs until another
entity takes over responsibility for public access TV. Money already
in the bank and donations will keep the station alive.
CCTV had a contract with the city under which the channel would
receive $7,500 every quarter, in addition to the use of a city-owned
house as a production studio. The city exercised it's escape clause
when CCTV refused to accept a budget reduction to $3,000 a quarter.
The contract officially ends May 18. The station has enough money
in the bank to continue until September, said Carol Bèzy, board
treasurer. The most likely successor is LCTV, a project envisioned
by Hollywood producer C.Tad Devlin, Chehalis, but the plan hasn't
secured funding yet.
The project would begin airing programing in September at the earliest.
Devlin's plan is unpopular with CCTV producers, who expect their
shows will be squeezed out in favor of programs from outside the
area. The board also named Karen Hansen spokeswoman for CCTV. Board
President Lee Coumbs had been handling that duty, but other board
members were uncomfortable with his willingness to work with Devlin.
Coumbs said he is more committed to ensuring public access TV in
the Twin Cities than making sure CCTV is the group to provide it.
"I really don't care what the entity is, as long as we have (public
access)," he said
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