Foundation faces looming deadline
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Marisa O’Neil
Members of the KOCE-TV Foundation are confident they will come up
with the millions necessary to buy the station’s license from Coast
Community College District.
The district’s board of trustees has set a March 10 deadline for
the foundation to agree to the terms of the sale before they reassess
what they will do with the station.
The foundation’s chairman, Bob Brown, said its members still are
raising the $8-million down payment and aren’t worried they will miss
its due date.
“We are proceeding,” Brown said. “We are still trying to raise
pledges and guarantors. I can’t tell you where we stand, but we are
confident we will have the money.”
The foundation made a winning bid in October of $8 million in cash
and $24 million on a long-term note. That first payment, Brown said,
is being collected through pledges, guarantors, donations and,
likely, a bank loan.
“That has been the case from the start,” he said. “We always knew
we would have to do that.”
A $100,000 payment, which Brown said the foundation does have, is
due March 10. The rest is not due until the end of June.
“I think they will come up with the money,” said district trustee
George Brown, who is not related to the foundation’s chairman. “It’s
not the money that’s the problem, it’s the terms they’re haggling
with.”
A bigger concern to both parties is the threatened lawsuit from
Daystar Television Network, which believes it should have been named
the highest responsible bidder with its $25-million cash offer. In
numerous letters sent to the district, network officials have
promised to sue the district and its trustees if they don’t break off
talks with the KOCE-TV Foundation and sell the station to Daystar.
After a closed session discussion at Wednesday night’s board
meeting, attorney Milford Dahl announced the district intended to
stick by the decision and give the foundation until March 10 to sign
the agreement.
If that agreement fails, he said, board members will decide
whether to sell to another bidder or simply keep the station.
Dahl sent a letter to Daystar’s attorney, Richard Lloyd Sherman,
the next day informing him of the decision. Dahl said he expected
them to file the suit shortly.
Meg Waters, spokeswoman for Daystar, said Monday there would be
“some litigation in the next few days.”
The latest snag comes after a series of problems that has plagued
the sale, which was intended to shore up the community college
district’s budget.
KOCE-TV’s initial attempt to enter a bid with Los Angeles public
broadcasting channel KCET fell apart due to time constraints. A host
of other bids from Christian broadcasters, including Daystar, raised
community concern that Orange County would lose its only PBS
affiliate.
The foundation then sweetened its bid with the support of local
leaders in business and education, including former baseball
commissioner Peter Ueberroth and Broadcom Chairman Henry Samueli.
Since then, the terms of the sale have been amended from the
original bid of $24 million over an extended period of time to $17.5
million and $2.5 million in services and programming, including
televised college courses. The price change, according to the
foundation and district, takes into account money that would be lost
if the station’s format changed.
“What the district and the foundation are doing is right for the
community,” Bob Brown said. “We are dedicated to making that happen.
There’s no question we need support from the community. We don’t have
everything in the bag and any help we can get is certainly welcome.”
He said he did not know if any of the station’s deep-pocketed
supporters would make up the difference if they came up short on the
$8 million.
Foundation member Joel Slutzky, who is working on the station’s
strategic planning, said that he’s looking forward to the negotiation
team getting everything finalized.
“I’m very anxious for us to finish negotiations so we can get on
with life,” he said.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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