Jan 26, 2010
Former WGBH accountant pleads guilty to using station funds
A past WGBH employee has pleaded guilty to embezzling almost $500,000 from the station, the Boston Herald reports. Philip McCabe of Reading, Pa., who worked as accounting manager from 1987 to 2007, used the money for "vacations, golf, dining, liquor and clothes," according to the paper. He was sentenced to two years in prison. He'll serve six months with the remainder suspended. McCabe also has to pay the station's $25,000 deductible on its insurance policy covering much of the loss. “We’re satisfied with the outcome and appreciate all the work of the attorney general’s office in handling the case and bringing it to resolution,” WGBH spokesperson Jeanne Hopkins told the Boston Business Journal.
FCC commissioner, CPB Board discuss future of pubcasting spectrum
Will public broadcasters someday be made to give up their portion of the spectrum? That concern surfaced during a wide-ranging discussion on the future of broadband at today's CPB Board meeting, going on all day at headquarters in Washington. FCC Commissioner Michael Copps told the board that the agency's proposed broadband plan, which he considers "perhaps the biggest initiative ever at the FCC," will be delivered to the president on March 17. Interested parties — including pubcasters — are currently "in question-asking mode" before drafting recommendations. One idea being floated is compensation for pubcasters that voluntarily turn over some of their spectrum to support the nation's growing appetite for broadband. CPB Board member Beth Courtney expressed concern that financially struggling stations may feel compelled to do so for monetary reasons. Copps said such issues would need to be taken into consideration before any decisions are made. The priority with any recommendations, he added, "is first do no harm." Another possibility was posed by another speaker, Ken Solomon of Dow Lohnes, a law firm that reps many public stations before the FCC: As over-air signals fall away, pubcasters might be given permission to keep a "lifeline" for viewers that need that service. Pubstations would receive compensation for carrying over-air signals from commercial stations. But Solomon also issued a warning. "I don't know that we can rest assured that ultimately some sort of coercive action will be taken if [relinquishing spectrum] is found to be necessary." But Copps stressed he wants a "good discussion" of broadband, adding that the spectrum needs to be put to good use, "and public broadcasting does that." He also said the FCC will undertake a spectrum inventory within the next year.