government access

Milwaukee City Channel is happy to deliver government transparency

The City of Milwaukee is Wisconsin’s largest city by far.  Its population of 570,000 easily outstrips Madison, the next largest city in the state at 270,000.  One might imagine that the video service team tasked with covering a big city government would reflect its size.  But you’d be wrong.  Milwaukee City Channel has a dedicated, creative, and hard-working staff of four. Paul Karczewski, City Channel Manager, who is tasked with being the buffer between requests and work assignments says, “We try to satisfy everyone’s needs, but we can’t always do that.”  But quickly, as if to voice the can-do attitude of City Channel staff, Tom Loppnow, Television Production Specialist, adds, “But we always do our best to find a way.”

The mission of City Channel is to cover government meetings, promote and cover city events, and serve the needs of city departments and the fifteen alders and mayor who govern the city. 

Meeting coverage

The standard workload for City Channel 25 includes covering 23 committees, commissions, councils, and boards that range from the Common Council to the Fire and Police Commission, to the Board of Zoning Appeals.  “We promise pure raw information as far as meetings go,” said Loppnow.  “What you see is what you get.  People think media has bias.  We don’t editorialize.  It’s 100% unedited.  What happens inside the room is what you see.  I think this is the biggest service we provide to anybody.”  Karczewski continued, “We give the community a way to see how government works whether or not they can come down to the building.  They can see how the budget process works.  They can find out about an issue.  The public can come here and speak.”  Loppnow added, “Sometimes a friend will comment on something that’s happening at the city.  They’ll have seen a misleading headline and I just tell them, ‘Go watch it.  Watch the meeting.  That’s not what happened.’  I think carrying meetings from beginning to end with no editing is the biggest and most important thing we do here.”

Technical advancements have made coverage more efficient.  In the early days, cameras were manned, equipment had to be moved around to meeting rooms, and it took more time and a much larger production crew. During that period, City Channel operated with a staff of seven and covered twelve committees.  Today, fiber optic connections link meeting rooms, which are equipped with robotic cameras and microphone systems, to a director’s control room that is configured to send out a live signal to both a livestream channel and cable TV. 

Everything was working just fine until the pandemic threw City Channel a curve ball:  how would they cover meetings with both in-person and online participation at the same time?  City Clerk Jim Owczarski knew it would be extremely important to maintain government transparency.  Karczewski said, “The City Clerk came to us and said, ‘you need to figure this out to keep city business going.’  We had a limited time to get things rolling and remain transparent.  We worked really hard to keep things running on time without skipping a beat and staying on air.  It took a lot of planning and trial and error, but we did it and I’m really proud of how we met that challenge.”  Manifesting that can-do attitude, in a matter of days the team figured out how to integrate online meeting platforms.  Rooms were redesigned, audio systems were improved, systems were upgraded, and officials were trained.  Go To Meeting was chosen as the main platform, but to this day, City Channel will help committees that want to use Zoom or Teams.  “Some software platforms do better at some things than others.  For example, Zoom offers bilingual features. So, we’re knowledgeable about all of them,” said Karczewski. 

City Channel is finding that more and more people are starting to come back to City Hall for meetings.  “It’s easier to participate here in the room,” said Karczewski.  “And sometimes there can be a glitch now and again with hybrid coverage.  But we will never go back to the way it was before.”

Before the pandemic, committees needed to assemble a quorum in the building in order to conduct business.  On one occasion a committee had to bring people in at 10 pm to address an important motion.  That is no longer the case.  But the ease with which committees can now call a meeting means that City Channel has to be ready at the drop of a hat to make it work.  “Special meetings can pop up at any time.  Sometimes it means using a room not normally used for meetings and making it work as a hybrid location.  We just find ways to adapt, make it work, and then make it even better,” said Loppnow.

Staff background 

City Channel Manager Paul Karczewski

Karczewski has been working in the television field since the early 1990’s.  When he applied to the City of Milwaukee 20 years ago, he had been traveling a lot for his job and was tired of it.  He was interested in politics and he liked the idea of giving back to the community – and of course working in video production.  Tom Loppnow began as a part-time employee in 2008. “At that time, I had my own video production business,” said Loppnow, “but the hours were long.  I had gotten tired of that, and I wanted something more stable with weekends off.”  When a fellow staffer became ill, his hours were increased and when a full-time position became available, he got the job.  Tom was ready to take the leap.  “A standard 8 – 5 day was really attractive to me.  Of course, that’s not the case anymore!  We often work evenings and sometimes weekends.” 

Serving city officials 

City Channel thinks of the mayor and all fifteen alders as their bosses and tries to please all of them, keeping in mind the mission of the station that enables Karczewski to put boundaries on what they will do. “We are a city service, covering city services and city-sponsored events,” he said.  Sometimes alders will sponsor an event that is not strictly a city event.  It might be a neighborhood event or a town hall meeting.  If they ask for help, City Channel will promote the event with a short PSA or do a promo graphic to run between shows on the channel or help them get a livestream set up on their personal Facebook page, but they won’t cover the event. 

Girls Day at Milwaukee City Hall

City-sponsored events reflect the diversity of its residents whose roots can be traced to all over the world – Europe, the Caribbean, Mexico, Central America, Africa and Southeast Asia.  On March 31, the city sponsored the annual Cesar Chavez Day, which celebrates the life of this Mexican-American man born in Arizona who fought for the rights of migrant workers.  On March 23, City Channel covered the 13th annual Girls’ Day, which takes place at City Hall and inspires girls to consider careers.  For the event, City Channel produced short features on notable Milwaukee women that were played that day and later carried on the city’s channels.  In August, City Channel will cover Hip Hop Week. 

Serving city departments 

Milwaukee City Channel also serves the needs of city departments.  Sometimes it might just be taking a press release and turning it into a graphical notice for play during breaks between programs on the City’s cable and livestream channels.  Sometimes a short video is the best way to get the information across.  Staff has produced features on winter parking, recycling, and even how salt brine is made.  “We try to leave 15 minutes between programs so we can get in these bits of information that we want to share with residents,” said Karczewski.  City Channel imports very little programming from outside sources.  “It has to be related to the city,” said Karczewski.  “We really take a fine-tooth comb to any show that comes to us.  It has to have high production values, too.” 

How audiences watch 

Most Milwaukee City Channel viewers watch its programming and meeting coverage on-demand.  People can pick the best time to view what they want to watch, and they can see it in full high-definition (HD).  Using the Granicus system, viewers can go directly to a meeting agenda item they are interested in watching.  Milwaukee City Channel offers Live Stream I and Live Stream II.  Live Stream I is the same feed as Charter Spectrum channel 25 and AT&T Channel 99.  It carries Common Council meetings, major committee meetings, and some event coverage.  Live Stream II carries more committee meetings and public court trials.  The livestreamed channels and archived meetings are online at  https://city.milwaukee.gov/cityclerk/CityChannel.

Still, a large portion of its audience prefers to watch local government coverage on cable TV.  “Some people are just not well-versed in how to get to our livestream or use the Granicus system,” said Loppnow.  “And a lot of constituents don’t have the internet.  One woman calls us at least every other week, asking how to access certain meetings.  She just can’t get it.  She is otherwise very intuitive and very active, but she just doesn’t understand computers.” 

State Law and video service providers in Milwaukee

Cable and telephone companies offering video service are called video service providers (VSPs) in Wisconsin law.  They are required to transmit the local PEG (Public, Education and Government) channels, but they can do it using any method they want to.   Charter Spectrum, which took over the Time Warner system in 2016, carries the PEG channels in SD – the kind of resolution whose hay day ended in the early 2000’s.   AT&T has always met this requirement in a unique way, providing U-Verse subscribers with a website menu of PEG access channel choices on channel 99.  Click a selection and a channel will pop up as a very low resolution 320 x 240p videostream. (By comparison, YouTube videos are commonly viewed at 1280 x 720p or higher.)  Several years ago, AT&T stopped promoting U-Verse and instead began offering customers DIRECTV.  In 2021, AT&T established a separate company for U-Verse and DIRECTV.  With the future of U-Verse in question, so is the presence of PEG channels over AT&T’s system.

Milwaukee City Channel began operating in 1984 when the City of Milwaukee signed the first cable television agreement with Time Warner.  City Channel 25 was one of three PEG access channels set aside for the city’s use.  Two other channels, educational access channel 14 and public access channel 96, were both ultimately managed by MATA Community Media, a non-profit.  Like most PEG operations at the time, both MATA and City Channel received funding from Time Warner to pay for equipment and provide a revenue stream for a good-sized operating budget.  When a second fifteen-year agreement was negotiated in the late 1990’s, a lump sum dedicated to PEG was once again negotiated as part of the agreement. That funding would be the last either of the PEG facilities would receive.  During the 2007 Wisconsin legislative session, a law was passed that revoked the cable franchises that had been negotiated at the local level and created a state licensing system.   PEG funding was sunset in 2011.  But with Time Warner’s lump sum in the hands of the two Milwaukee PEG stations, both were able to draw on this revenue for several years beyond 2011.   MATA finally closed its doors at the end of 2017.  The two channels once reserved for public and educational uses went dark.  City Channel now had to rely entirely on the city’s general fund for its budget and had to downsize. 

Modernization and making a difference

The loss of PEG funding did not deter the city from going forward with the modernization of City Channel’s production and distribution facilities.  In 2016 and 2017, under the direction of Dennis Geraghty, City Channel’s first director, the station converted to an all-digital HD facility. In 2020, it underwent another upgrade in order to make hybrid meetings possible.  The improvements City Channel has made in recent years means it is operating out of a first-rate facility and has the tools it needs to serve the city efficiently.  It’s also nimble enough to adapt to meet a wide array of needs posed by elected officials, city staff, and city committees.  City Channel is well aware of how quickly the technological landscape can change.  “Technical changes are always happening,” said Loppnow.  “You have to keep up with them.  A few years from now people might be asking, ‘what is this cable that you speak of?’”

Loppnow and Karczewski emphasized that Milwaukee City Channel’s prime mission is government transparency.  “Once you experience transparency,” said Loppnow, “you can’t go back.  People will ask, ‘why are you not broadcasting those meetings anymore?  What are you hiding?’”  Over the last nearly 40 years, Milwaukee City Channel has become indispensable to this community of 570,000.  Last year Milwaukee City Channel logged a total of 700 “premiere” broadcast hours. 

“We get a lot of praise from the community, alders, and upper management,” said Karczewski.  “That means a lot to us.  We know people recognize that Milwaukee City Channel is an important part of city government and it’s another reason why we stay here. We have a lot to do for four people, but we manage to make it work.  We like what we do and we’re happy to do it.”

De Pere's Channel 4 government coverage adds depth to the media landscape

Justine Braun, Video Production Specialist, listens to feedback after informing the De Pere city council about winning awards in the 2022 WCM Media Fest.

Justine Braun, Video Production Specialist for the City of De Pere, makes a clear distinction between the kind of coverage the city provides through De Pere TV with the kind of coverage it receives from the local broadcast affiliates.  “De Pere gets a decent amount of coverage from the local Green Bay broadcast affiliates,” she said, “but the focus is very much on micro level stories – they come out and do a story when something happens.  We show up and do stories about all the good that people do in our community and explain how our community works.  We are able to tell a wide range of stories in a lot more depth, so people end up with a much better understanding of local issues.”

Located just outside Green Bay, the City of De Pere has a population of 25,000.  It has been offering local government coverage on Channel 4 for more than thirty years – ever since the city signed its first cable television agreement with Time Warner.  “People often refer to us just as Channel 4,” said Braun.  “We are lucky we have a great spot on the dial where people know where to find us.”  She says “lucky” because after Charter Communications (Spectrum) bought the state’s Time Warner franchises in 2016, it never moved any PEG (Public, Education, Government) channels from their original low channel numbers.  Everywhere else in the state, the company moved the PEG channels to the 980’s and 990’s right after Wisconsin enacted a state-level franchise system in 2008, making it hard for viewers to find them.

De Pere’s dedication to bringing local government to its residents means De Pere TV covers twelve city boards and commissions: City Council (two meetings each month), Board of Public Works, Finance/Personnel Committee, Board of Park Commissioners, Historic Preservation Commission, Plan Commission, Business Improvement District Board, Redevelopment Authority, Board of Health, the License Committee, the Sustainability Commission, and the Police and Fire Commission.  “Our mission is to make government accessible,” said Braun.  “We want our residents to hold us accountable, and by carrying city meetings, we give them an opportunity to do that,” she said.  

During the COVID pandemic, the city transitioned to a hybrid meeting style, where residents can view and participate in meetings online.  The next day, cable subscribers can view the coverage on Channel 4.  “We replay our meetings in blocks of three, with the most recent meeting starting the block on the hour, repeating three times each day,” said Braun.  Viewers can also catch archived meetings on YouTube and on the city’s website, where a Granicus IQM2 System integrates agendas and minutes with video coverage of meetings using indexing software.   “Anyone can watch our coverage, not just cable TV viewers, although we consider our cable television channel to be our first and foremost platform,” said Braun.

Braun also produces The Mayor’s Corner, a monthly half-hour program hosted by De Pere Mayor James Boyd.  “I’m most proud of this show,” said Braun.  “While it had been done before, it had not been done in a while when I arrived in May 2021.  I worked with Mayor Boyd and developed a new format that took us out of city hall.”  Every month Braun takes a two-camera set-up to a location somewhere in the city where the mayor talks with an interesting guest.  Sometimes it's a member of the city staff, like the police chief or the parks director, and sometimes it’s a community member like Kim Thompson, who is the De Pere Sister Cities International Coordinator.  “Most people don’t get to see their local officials as their neighbor and have an opportunity to meet them and share their concerns.  With this program we bring government a little closer to people’s everyday life.”  Braun likes to complete an episode with a short, highly edited segment that complements the interview.  The program about De Pere’s sister city, Amal, Sweden, ended with a feature about a visit from Swedish delegates, following them as they toured the city and spoke with city staff and officials. 

Braun is a graduate of UW-Oshkosh’s Radio, TV, Film Program.  While a student, she served as the Operations Manager and the Station Manager for Titan TV, the educational access TV station on the Charter Spectrum system.  “You could say I worked for community television for three years while at UW-Oshkosh.”  Braun moved around a lot after graduation, working in local news at WAOW in Wausau first as an intern and then as a full-time staffer responsible for promotions and PSAs.  She also worked in a communications position for Easter Seals and Goodwill in North Dakota.  She returned to the area when her husband was offered a position with a local television broadcast affiliate. 

“I was excited to work for the City of De Pere because it gives me the opportunity to tell community stories.  When I worked in the non-profit sector, I learned that there are so many great stories to tell, but most non-profits are not set up to tell them.  Now that I’m with the city, I can share all kinds of interesting things with citizens, like the fact that the city makes its own salt grind for the streets.  We explain why we do that and how we do it.  I get to tell our residents how our city works and how our tax dollars are spent.” 

Braun has part-time help from Jamie Christensen to cover the night-time meetings and she also works with Communications Specialist Andy Pantzlaff, who is responsible for the city’s general communications and social media channels.  Braun puts her lengthy experience crafting PSAs to work by creating feature shorts promoting city government and “what we do to serve them and what lengths we go to serve them.”  Braun considers these two-to-three-minute promos designed for social media to be her specialty. With her marketing hat on, Braun has produced segments about the fire department, which recently celebrated its 150-year anniversary; the city’s sign shop, which showed viewers how signs are made step by step; and the long-awaited Southern Bridge project, which may soon become a reality.  The bridge would add a badly needed second bridge over the Fox River, which has always divided the town into east De Pere and west De Pere and caused a lot of traffic congestion downtown. Braun worked with the historical society to do a look-back on the history of the De Pere bridge, which you can see on YouTube here.

These documentary shorts are not only played on the city’s various social media channels (Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, TikTok and YouTube page), but also on Channel 4.  Viewers of channel 4 also see some programs from outside sources like The Local Perspective produced by the League of Wisconsin Municipalities and WCM member media centers and Wisconsin Eye’s Rewind – Your Week in Review, which is now available to all WCM member media centers for replay.  Braun is eager to add more local programming to the line-up.  “We are expanding the content we do slowly,” said Braun.  She is particularly looking forward to developing public health programs with the city-based health department.  Braun is approaching these new projects with the goal of making them “accurate and easy to digest” as well as engaging – not “dry.” 

Justine Braun happily poses in front of her production set-up.

One way that Braun has injected some excitement into her programming is with drone footage.  Braun has become a licensed drone pilot.  “Drone footage looks great in our marketing compilations,” she said, “and I’m also available to help the police and fire departments.”  Braun is also looking forward to the purchase of a new Castus server that will automatically inject programs onto the channel for playback.  She is also hoping to garner more sponsors for programming to augment the use of Video Service Provider fees that are set aside for communications.  Kress Inn currently sponsors the city council meetings.  The inn’s logo appears in a corner of the screen during the meeting and afterward, there is a 30 second underwriter spot.   She points out that “everyone can see our programming, not just cable television subscribers” and hopes that she can attract more area businesses to support De Pere TV. 

“Without a strong local media, people just do not know what is happening in their community,” said Braun.  While she likes using social media to reach residents, Braun has concerns with it.  “One person makes a statement and other people pile on and too often, no one in the whole string knows what is truly going on.”  Braun sees her job as bringing facts to bear on community issues so that residents can make informed decisions in their role as citizens. “Things can fall apart pretty quickly without facts.”