|
A glimmer
of hope
for radio pirates
(Evening Telegraph, Feb 10/1988) |
Cecil believes PCRL now has more listeners than some of the
commercial radio stations in its catchment area. The station
deliverers its blend of music and chat with the help of 30 voluntary
presenters and transmitters which broadcast from secret addresses
around Birmingham.
But it
maintains a permanent base in Dudley Road, Edbaston, where listeners
can drop-in and find out about fund-raising events and youth club and
charity trips which are frequently organised.
Cecil
says: "PCRL break even through promotions and advertising
despite the regular expense of replacing confiscated equipment -- and
would thrive if made legal.
Over the years he's made several attempts to persuade government to
legalese the station, coming closest last year when plans were afoot
to issue 26 experimental community radio licences in Briton.
But the
government abandoned the plan at the eleventh hour, dashing PCRL's
aspirations once again.
Cecil
welcomes home secretary Douglas Hurd's recently unveiled proposals
but admits he doesn't fully trust the government to be fair in
administering radio reforms.
"The
government my try to legalese community radio in a way that would
make it fail," he says. And PCRL is uncertain how much it
would cost to turn in his scull and crossbones, although Cecil is
confident any reasonable levies could be met by the extra advertising
revenue legality would bring.
home: pcrlfm.co.uk |
|

Cecil
Morris: "The Government may try to legalese community radio in a
way that would make it fail" |
In THE heat of
the Handsworth Riot, one man felt he had a mission to restore peace
and understanding.
Cecil Morris took to the airways and with a team of community radio
pirates transmitted all day, to try and calm the troubled streets of Birmingham.
Since
that day in 1985, the station Cecil founded -- The Peoples Community
Radio Link - has rarely broken that continuous broadcast to an
erea with a 25-mile radius.
That
takes in Coventry, where Mercia Sound has just announced it's
intention of merging with Birmingham's BRMB in a likely bid for one
of the new national franchise planned in a government shake-up of the
airwaves. The shake-up should also create hundreds of community
stations. And PCRL hopes to benefit after an insistent struggle to
stay on the air despite the attempts of the Department of Trade and
Industry to kill it off. In two, tough turbulent years the station
has been raided 104 times and lost more than £130,000 of
equipment, says Cecil.
But PCRL
has always stated its desire to operate as a responsible, legal
station, providing important service for the Afro-Caribbean
communities of the West Midlands. Now, at last, there is a glimmer of
hope on the horizon. A Cecil is confident PCRL has experience and
confidence to be picked for a franchise. He talks passionately of the
station's birth in 1985. "When the riot started we got on |
the air to
tell people to keep off the streets of Handsworth," he says.
"They had to be told what was happening so they wouldn't go and
see for themselves and get caught up in it. "We'd just launched
PCRL, and decided to start broadcasting seven days a week, 24-hours a
day. "At the time of the riot, we were giving out information
and news.
I think
the entire black community was listening to us." Cecil claims
PCRL also rapidly picked up substantial white audience, while
striving to restore racial harmony. Now up-to half tuning into 103.5
FM to enjoy PCRL are white.
After
the riot, he saw no reason to wind down the station which gained
popularity overnight. He maintains the refusal of legal stations to
in Birmingham to provide comparable service made his stance necessary.
"I'd
ask the stations to provide coverage for the Afro-Caribbean
community in proportion to their numbers in the area." he says.
"That would have meant 14 hours a week. I was offered a
half-hour slot. It was very frustrating."
So, PCRL
defiantly provided the service mainstream radio would have not,
offering black music, news and views, influencing the coverage of its
legal competitors. It survived through the support of advertising by
small business and benefit concerts featuring sympathetic stars such
as Jamaican reggae star Freddie McGregor. |