I’m posting Nicole’s letter here in full. Her last day is next Tuesday. ~N

September 24, 2008
To: Pacifica National Board, Local Station Boards, All management and staff, Affiliate stations, collaborators, and stakeholders in Pacifica
Fr: Nicole Sawaya, executive director/CEO
On August 3rd I gave notice to the Pacifica Board that I would be leaving. September 30th (end of our fiscal year) will be my last day. Concurrently, I had written myself out of the FY09 budget, as the Foundation is hard-pressed to support two well-paid executives. You lead from the top.
Lew Hill is the founder of Pacifica, now almost a 60 year old non-profit media organization. If I could have a conversation with anyone to explain my departure, it would be with Lew Hill. So, I decided to write him a letter.
Feel free to read it, and to share with others who care about Pacifica. All I ask is that this preface always accompany the letter as it sets the context.
I thank you for the opportunity to serve!
Peace.
********************
September 23, 2008
Dear Lew Hill,
Greetings. My name is Nicole Sawaya, and currently, I’m the executive director and chief executive of the radio endeavor you started called Pacifica. It’s changed a lot.
You wouldn’t believe what your “killer app”, as some might portray it in 21st century lexicon, has spawned. Now there are 5 stations licensed to Pacifica in densely populated and roiling urban areas – millions of human beings within ear shot, all with easy access to the cheapest and most accessible broadcast mediums on the planet, radio. Yes, the planet. There is an Archive of programming and folios spanning decades – a repository and collection of voices that truly belongs to the people as part of the history of our country and the world. And, there are over a hundred smaller stations scattered through rural and urban settings — cities and towns and ridge tops — affiliated with Pacifica and broadcasting our programming – a network that has been in place for quite awhile.
Beyond that, your notion that the listeners would voluntarily financially support radio, journalism and cultural exchange, created a model for many, many non-commercial educational radio stations to apply. Your vision of public ownership of the airwaves put into practice with the radio license you applied for and grew as the first non-profit community licensee station, gained great traction and has been replicated exponentially.
We don’t exchange The Subscriber radios anymore for pledges, and you wouldn’t recognize how the fundraising marathons have changed – it’s a bit like an on-air shopping experience. But listeners continue to support us voluntarily with their hard earned money, and they’re not necessarily just bound to radios to listen to us.
An aside: When I was (briefly) general manager of your first station, KPFA, there was a Subscriber radio in the office, but it was tucked away and dusty. When I discovered it, soon after taking the job, I was so excited to learn of its history. It completely inspired me as Pacifica was heading to its 50th anniversary. So elegant, so innovative for its time, so smart.
Mr. Hill, what you conceived has had one of the highest impacts in media history. Not just the staunch belief in listener support, but your notions that journalistic enterprises should remain unfettered from any sort of business support in order to maintain credibility; that to help in striving for a more peaceful and just world, radio (or what we now refer to as media) programming should give access to myriad viewpoints and in-depth news, coupled with an exposure to the arts and to cultures and happenings from all over the world; that innovation is vital, have all lived on. You were a pioneer.
Fast forward to today.
Our country is at war. Our government is a death machine abroad and a fear machine at home. Our broadcast media is, in general, mind-numbingly useless, filled with shameless propagandists and completely profit driven. The earth’s climate is changing radically and the gap between rich and poor is larger than the Grand Canyon, with by far the larger group on the poor end. I could go on, but it would take a while.
Your Pacifica is showing signs of stress as well.
Sadly, it is no longer focused on service to the listeners but absorbed with itself and the inhabitants therein. I call it Planet Pacifica, a term I coined during my hiring process. There is an underlying culture of grievance coupled with entitlement, and its governance structure is dysfunctional. The by-laws of the organization have opened it up to tremendous abuse, creating the opportunity for cronyism, factionalism, and faux democracy, with the result of challenging all yet helping nothing. Pacifica has been made so flat, that it is concave – no leadership is possible without an enormous struggle through the inertia that committees and collectives and STV’s (no, not sexually transmitted viruses, but single transferable votes) can engender.
Pacifica calls itself a movement, yet currently it is behaves like a jobs program, a cult, or a social service agency. And oftentimes, the loudest and most obstreperous have the privilege of the microphone. There are endless meetings of committees and “task forces”– mostly on the phone – where people just like to hear themselves talk. Sometimes they get lucrative contracts from their grandstanding. It’s been grueling for someone in my position, someone like me who is not a process person, much less a political gamer. I keep asking: what’s the endgame? Paralysis has set in, coupled with organizational drift.
The programming isn’t attracting many listeners anymore, either. It skews towards the narrow in its editorial stance, leans towards the niche, and change to the programming can’t occur without a fight. The listening audience is small, in other words, the stations have yet to grow into their large signals.
Business practices are oftentimes shoddy and opaque and mirror the culture of our times – lots of self-interest with a focus on individual needs as opposed to performance, affordability, or the common good. And we’ve hit some tough economic times without having the general will to do the hard work necessary in order to ensure sustainability – contracting rather than continually expanding the size of our financial obligations. Basically, resources and airtime have been allocated for internal political purposes at the expense of service to audience, innovation, or the care and feeding of our broadcast physical infrastructure. Some of this has to do with the fact that very few people either on air or off air actually have radio experience, other than being part of Pacifica.
That was not the case with you, nor is it with me.
Conversely, there are many dedicated and smart people working within Pacifica. They may not work at full speed – it is rather “comfortable” especially for those who work unsupervised – but they make a consistent effort to give voice to the voiceless and hold government and power accountable. And those who work without self-interest or giving constant grief to management (a four-letter word in Pacifica) are to be applauded.
The overall media landscape has changed fundamentally. I find it exciting and wanted very much to bring Pacifica into the 21st century. The demographic of our country has changed as well, not to mention all the new generations now active and alert to the world around them. It is, to quote Victor Hugo, the best of times and the worst of times. Apparently, it’s always been like that.
Pacifica could take advantage of technology, both at the front end (content and programming) and the back end (infrastructure and business applications), but that would require the general will of the internal stakeholders, and that general will is not cohesive enough or even amenable to altering the status quo.
I have given notice and will be leaving Pacifica shortly. Despite my best intentions and determined and focused efforts, I was continually thwarted to do the job I was hired to do. I did my best to apply my knowledge, expertise, and creativity to Pacifica, and we made some forward progress.
I gave to those responsible for the governance and oversight, plans, clarity, and transparency. They cannot deny knowledge of the state of the network. Whether they act on it, or just call in consultants to tell them what time it is, is another issue. I tried to dispel magical thinking in all arenas and was relentless in my attempts to get some best practices and collaborations in place.
I had some success.
It’s not necessary for me to alliterate those successes. Despite being handed an enfeebled situation and having no resources to work with, I gave it my best shot and worked hard. And despite having to fight for every inch of standing, not to mention authority, I have enjoyed working with those who actually work and accomplish bona fide deliverables of consequence and service.
We stand now on the shoulders of hundreds, if not thousands of those who have contributed internally. And Pacifica is much loved and valued by its listener supporters. Pacifica will carry on, and it has been a challenging opportunity to, albeit briefly, help out.
I hope that all stakeholders remember that Pacifica is a public trust, a veritable weapon of mass information, and keep a big vision in play rather than petty politics.
Thanks for being a bold and brave broadcaster.
With much respect,
Nicole
6 Comments so far
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My Email sig says:
“In solidarity with those of us who love the colorless, odorless
waves that move through little boxes all over the world. the fact that
sound actually emerges, on reflection, is so amazing as to be
nearly unbelievable…..”
-rogue finch
To lose Pacifica and the possibility of no more waves bringing sound would be unbearable….
It’s all true what Nicole says. I only wish she would have acted more forcefully. If she was leaving, do something special, memorable and cataclysmic. That is what is necessary now. Pacifica is nearly dying.
Pacifica is not a radio network any longer. It has been hijacked by little minded one note johnny’s who keep their buddies in power so they can follow along on their coatails. Some directors (and others) LOVE to hear themselves talk. People with little to say and NO solutions.
The biggest fear of anyone in any capacity is to be called a racist. It’s easy to achieve too. Race baiting has hampered the Foundation as much as anything financial because that stops dialogue and action. Meanwhile People of Color all over the US and the world suffer just as much and in the same ways as before this phenomenon took over. In fact Pacifica has done little on the airwaves in NYC where I am from to heal any antagonisms and has done plenty of emotional damage if you have had the pleasure of governing or working there. People of Color who do not tow the line are abused and mistrusted as well.
As a former director of Pacifica (05, 06), I with others tried to bring transparency through Director’s Inspections. Investigations and reports were made and nothing happened. Those who used Foundaton dollars to build their power base through buying expensive useless equipment and looking the other way when it disappeared remain employed today.
No one in a position of power sees fit to preserving the “host” as their primary goal. Maybe it isn’t easy. However that is the job and sometimes it isn’t pleasant. But it must be done. It seems for several years now no one has been able to gather one testicle between themeselves to do the unpopular move: Dismiss those who do not serve the listeners and Pacifica’s mission. And freshen up the air a little too!
Perhaps we need Donald Trump’s favorite words added to the discussion: “You’re Fired”.
Patty Heffley
Comment by patty heffley 24 September 2008 @ 8:08 pmformer Pacifica Director/WBAI
So sorry Nicole’s tenure did not last . She sounds so dedicated. Am aware of the problems of competing egos and goals that have plagued KPFA.
Comment by Lois Blair Roberts 8 October 2008 @ 6:44 pmDo hope that we can struggle on without her and continue to provide free sopeech radio.
again, I left a comment last week that does not appear….need I copy it again ? so much repetition..
see repost of Nicole’s letter on
http://www.la.indymedia.org
also
seems to fit KPFK’s problems also and in Los Angeles we KNOW NOTHING OF WHAT IS GOING ON at OUR station or at Pacifica…so info is being exposed via these sites instead…
what happened to ‘open informative radio’ ? duh….
sorry for such turmoil and stresses w/strains on all concerned….from prior postings on pacificana.org by Nicole I was impressed with her/your insight and sincere descriptions…and now…what do we [those who pay for radio station's sustenance and volunteer our time and spend hours dedicated to finding and sharing info to be Participative instead of only obedient receptive sheep listeners].
sorry you are both lost to us.
maryjanie
Comment by maryjanie 13 November 2008 @ 7:49 pmNicole Sawaya sadly lost whatever credibility she might originally have brought to the job by enabling the police beating of a KPFA volunteer. Pacifica is sinking towards a disgraceful demise.
See SF Bayview online archives from August 2008 for details.
Comment by CS Rodgers 31 December 2008 @ 5:33 pmNathan – where are you and how do you continue on ?
this is the old site I have but find none other even on Google…
want to let some of us know your movings forward?
Because I,for one, thought you were doing a helpful function, did someone replace you or did position evaporate ?
how does all that work or not work well?
thanks.
Comment by mary janie 20 March 2009 @ 6:44 pmHi Mary Janie,
Thanks for the kind words. The NPC position was cut for budgetary reasons – no replacement. I have landed at Free Speech Radio News now — fsrn.org.
~Nathan
Comment by Nathan Moore 30 April 2009 @ 2:31 pm