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Sale
of KOCE Broadcasting License Finalized
The Coast Community College District Board of Trustees and the KOCE Foundation
held a special presentation tonight to conclude the sale of Orange County’s
public broadcasting station to the stations’ fundraising organization.
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CONTACT:
Erin Cohn
District Director,
Public Affairs
(714) 438-4605
November 3, 2004
NEWS
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The Coast Community College District Board of Trustees and the KOCE Foundation
held a special presentation tonight to conclude the sale of Orange County’s
public broadcasting station to the stations’ fundraising organization.
The
Board voted last December to accept a $32 million bid for the KOCE-TV Channel
50 broadcasting license from the KOCE Foundation, a fundraising organization
that has been working with the District and helping to support KOCE for
decades. A final sale agreement between the Foundation and the District was
approved in March which included an $8 million down payment from the
Foundation, a $20 million note, as well as lease and programming agreements
between the two organizations.
The
agreement gave the Foundation until November 1 to come up with the down
payment. In October, the KOCE Foundation announced it had secured the funding
for the down payment, after a seven-month campaign to gather the required cash
and pledges. On Monday, November 1, the Foundation wired the required down
payment to the District, effectively making the sale final.
“This
is a great day for Orange County,” said District Board President George Brown
Wednesday night. “The finalization of this sale guarantees that Orange County
will continue to have its own Public Broadcasting Station focused on the needs
and the news unique to our county.
“I
wish the KOCE Foundation continued success in maintaining and enhancing the
station’s legacy as Orange County’s own educational PBS station.”
“Our
Trustee Committee worked hard for many, many months to turn this sale into a
reality, and I am thrilled and delighted that it has come to pass” said Trustee
Jerry Patterson, who served with Brown on the Board’s KOCE committee. “It was
important to our community, and to me personally, that KOCE remain an Orange
County-based, educational PBS affiliate, qualified to receive Corporation for
Public Broadcasting grants, now and in the future.”
“My
thanks go out to many who were instrumental in making this happen, including
KOCE Foundation members Bob Brown, Jerry Cwiertnia, Joel Slutzky and Ardelle
St. George, along with many others. I would also give a huge thank you to our
Coast District Vice Chancellor Ron Berggren and the District team including
John Renley and Jeff Arthur. Truly, their tireless efforts are what kept the
whole fabric of this transaction together,” Patterson said.
“The
KOCE-TV Foundation Board is very excited that the lengthy license transfer
process is now coming to a close,” said Bob Brown, chairman of the KOCE-TV
Foundation. “We look forward to enhancing the value of this extremely important
asset through expanded education, arts, culture and information for Orange
County,” he added.
“The
entire community owes a great debt to the KOCE-TV Foundation Board and the
Coast District Trustees,” said Mel Rogers, KOCE president. “Together, they have
hammered out a deal that will preserve Orange County’s truly local television
station and enable it to flourish. Now the work really begins as we turn KOCE
into a mission-driven media company that will unite Orange County, reveal and
promote the OC spirit and lifestyle and reflect it throughout Southern
California and the nation.”
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The Coast Community College District is the seventh largest community college
district in the nation in credit enrollment, serving more than 60,000 students
each semester. The district is comprised of Coastline Community College
headquartered in Fountain Valley, Golden West College in Huntington Beach,
Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa, and KOCE-TV, the district’s public
broadcasting station.
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