Whaaa!! We don't wanna broadcast hurricane information on a radio station that carries Rush Limbaugh! Whaaaaa!!
You liberals are such fucking crybabies.... GEEZ!!
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By Scott Wyman
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Posted
June 13 2007, 1:19 PM EDT
Rush Limbaugh has long
been a thorn in the side of liberals, but now, because of him, some
Democratic politicians don't even want to join with a local radio
station to broadcast hurricane information.
Radio station WIOD, AM 610, has been the official channel for emergency
information from Broward County government for the past year. The
County Commission, all Democrats, balked at renewing the deal Tuesday,
unable to stomach the station also being home to Limbaugh's talk show.
LocalLinks
Commissioner Stacy
Ritter said she did not want to support a station that's out of step
with area politics. Ritter, a Democratic stalwart in the state
Legislature before being elected to county office, cited talk shows
hosted by Limbaugh and Sean Hannity and WIOD's partnership with Fox
News.
"They have every right to speak, but we don't have to do business with them," she said.
Limbaugh responded to the commissioners Wednesday on his radio show. He
said the county's qualms about WIOD are a sign of out-of-control
partisanship in the nation. He quipped that if the county wanted him
off the air, all that officials would need to do is schedule emergency
press conferences during his broadcast from noon to 3 p.m.
"They are politicizing the delivery of emergency news, which is
non-partisan," said Limbaugh, who lives in Palm Beach. "They are making
weather a partisan issue."
Limbaugh has long been a fixture on WIOD, but no county official raised
an issue about him or the other shows when the deal was approved for
the first time a year ago.
The deal with WIOD would ensure that news conferences are broadcast
start to finish live from the county Emergency Operations Center in
Plantation. Emergency managers became concerned during hurricanes in
2004 and 2005 that radio and television stations preempted their
announcements in favor of news out of Miami.
Ken Charles, WIOD's director of AM programming, said Tuesday the
station's talk show lineup has no relationship with its news coverage
and that the county should focus on the benefits of teaming with the
station.
"It's a shame that people would let politics get in the way of saving lives in a hurricane," Charles said.
The contract with WIOD was on the verge of being rejected when
commissioners instead delayed a decision until next week. They told
their communications staff they want more information on why WIOD was
recommended and what their options are.
Ritter's concerns were echoed by Commissioners Ken Keechl, a former
president of the Dolphins gay Democratic club, and Suzanne Gunzburger,
who served on the vote-tallying board that recounted the 2000
presidential election.
But Commissioner John Rodstrom, a one-time young Republican leader who
later became a Democrat, said the county should not politicize
emergency management.
"If we are going to start censoring what people write in the paper or
speak on the radio or television, that's a slippery slope," Rodstrom
said. "This is necessary. It's something we need to do for emergency
response."
A county task force that looked into the response to Hurricane Wilma
listed finding a radio partner among its recommendations last year.
Judy Sarver, the county's public communications director, said WFTL and
WLRN also offered to take on the role, but that she and other emergency
planners preferred WIOD because of its signal strength, numerous FM
sister stations and willingness to give Broward top play.
Scott Wyman can be reached at swyman@sun-sentinel.com or 954-356-4511.