Wisconsin Community Media

Community media's mission is more important than ever

WCM Executive Director Mary Cardona resigned her position with Wisconsin Community Media at the end of the year after having served the organization since 2005.  Cardona’s career in the field began in the 1980’s, and at various times she has been a video producer, a media center manager, and a consultant to cities on cable television and PEG issues.  She has also served on local, regional, and national boards and committees.  She submitted the following article about how she views the role of community television in the years ahead.

The great importance community television plays in our democratic society is very clear to me, and I hope that it will continue to be championed in the difficult years ahead. 

While Wisconsin Community Media members use a wide variety of platforms to distribute locally-produced programming, what undergirds all of it is the mission of cable television’s public, education, and government (PEG) access channels.  The 1970’s Federal Communications Commission saw an opportunity with cable television to expand the voices that could be heard beyond the big three broadcast networks, and it pursued policies to make sure electronic media was open to local communities.   

The media landscape today is far different.  Anyone can speak through social media, a website, or a podcast.  We can pick and choose who we listen to and who we believe.  With no direct experience to evaluate claims, it often comes down to who we trust.  And that trust is often given to nationally-known figures we have never met, never interacted with, never walked the same streets with.  That is not true with local community television and it’s why local media is more important today than ever. 

I hope that despite the headwinds community television faces that it thrives.  Carving out a non-commercial space for the public in a for-profit media environment and then defending that perimeter against continual assaults has been the task of PEG advocates for the last 50 years.

It will continue. 

Over the years, we have given ground on cable franchise fees, dedicated PEG fees, channel location, signal quality, reliability, and even the ability of these channels to be created in the first place.

But we are still here.

Now that the cable TV industry is offering live streaming options on broadband, PEG advocates are acting to ensure there is non-commercial space for community channels there, too.  We are also looking at how non-commercial community channels can be better funded through fees, so that professionals can manage, facilitate, and program community channels in the public interest. 

We need the “community” mission of PEG media – however it is distributed.  This mission is dedicated to building and maintaining communities by giving people the opportunity to understand the issues facing all kinds of people with all kinds of needs and interests in their community, their region, and their state. 

The mission is served when people are given the opportunity to watch municipal and school board meetings, and when community members can stand up in front of a camera and say what they think and know their neighbors and friends and colleagues can see them and talk to them about it later.  There is accountability in local media that has become lost in the national media landscape and that is becoming even more difficult to assess with the proliferation of AI images and text.  And for that reason, what Wisconsin Community Media does, what our member media centers do, and what our community producers do, are all vitally important and why I think the mission of PEG is more important than ever and why PEG community media is here to stay.

As I leave my role as executive director of Wisconsin Community Media, I want to say it has been a privilege to have worked with so many people dedicated to this cause serving on boards, staffing media centers, and contributing as volunteer production assistants and community producers.  I’ve met legislators; municipal, state, and national officials; viewers; non-profit managers; local business owners; media production equipment vendors; journalists; attorneys; and media advocates from around the country who all instinctively “get” how important our mission is, and it has always been a joy to connect with them. 

Thank you all!

How does local government work? A series of videos will explain.

The UW Madison-Division of Extension and Fitchburg FACTv are collaborating on a series of short videos to explain how local government functions.  Karl Green, Program Manager of the Local Government Education Program, approached Wisconsin Community Media for help in creating easy to digest videos to explain various concepts and procedures to local news reporters and newly elected officials.

Mary Cardona, Executive Director of Wisconsin Community Media, who involved Jeremy Crosby, Director of FACTv, in the project, immediately saw it as a way to also educate citizens and create better informed voters.  “Jeremy agreed immediately to produce the spots, knowing that the series fits perfectly with the mission of community media centers to make government transparent and educate residents on the issues,” said Cardona.

Green says about 20% of local officials are new every two years and local news reporters rotate in and out of positions at “significant rates.”  The lack of understanding about how local government works means that officials may make decisions based on inaccurate concepts and that reporters may write stories couched in an inaccurate understanding of what is going on and finally, voters may make decisions based on erroneous information in the media.

The Local Government Education Program has been providing factual non-biased, non-partisan local government education for decades.  “Wisconsin Community Media is very excited to be partnering with the Extension on these videos,” said Cardona. 

The first set of videos will be covering municipal budgets.  Among the topics covered are explaining the revenue and expense sides of a local government budget, describing what a levy is, understanding the concept of “net new construction,” and the role of a referendum.  Later videos will cover municipal property taxes and municipal elections.