This falls under the headings of both corporate accountability and
transportation.

Clear Channel is a large company that, under our present legal structure, has
been allowed to buy up some 1200 radio stations.

Tom Mathews
Issue Chair: corporate accountability; transportation
============================================================
Subj:    Bicyclists Accuse Clear Channel DJs of Inciting Attacks
Date:   03-11-03 10:15:08 EST
From:   [log in to unmask] (David Orr)
Sender: [log in to unmask] (Sierra Club Forum on
Transportation Issues)
Reply-to:   [log in to unmask] (Sierra Club Forum on
Transportation Issues)
To: [log in to unmask]

http://www.velonews.com/news/fea/5058.0.html .  Be careful out there!


Bicyclists Accuse DJs of Inciting Attacks
By CONNIE MABIN


CLEVELAND (AP) - Bicyclists are demanding that the nation's largest radio
group be punished because disc jockeys at three stations made on-air
comments they say encouraged drivers to throw bottles at bike riders or hit
them with open car doors.

They say the morning show hosts at Clear Channel Communications stations in
Cleveland, Houston and Raleigh, N.C., also suggested motorists blast horns
at cyclists, and speed past them and slam on their brakes in front of them.

``DJs encouraging the masses to hurt people in any form is insipid, and
should not go unpunished,'' said Edwin D. Reeves, 30, a cyclist and ceramic
engineer in St. Louis.

Clear Channel, based in San Antonio, owns roughly 1,200 radio stations in
the United States.

The company won't release transcripts or tapes of the broadcasts, but the
three stations apologized on the air and Clear Channel donated $10,000 and
air time to promote bicycle safety.

``We deeply regret that comments made by on-air personalities were
misinterpreted. Clear Channel does not condone violence in any form and we
are committed to working with the cycling community to improve cycling
safety,'' chief executive John Hogan said in a statement.

Clear Channel, which said it was coincidental that similar comments came
from three stations, said it told the stations to refer questions to
corporate headquarters. It wouldn't say if the disc jockeys were
disciplined.

The comments started June 30 on WMJI in Cleveland when one of the morning
show personalities complained that a group of bicyclists had held him up in
traffic near his home.

``The other guys started chiming in,'' said listener Don Barnett, service
manager at Century Cycles in Medina. ``Then it escalated. People started
calling in.''

Similar remarks came weeks later on WDCG-FM in Raleigh and KLOL-FM in
Houston.

Lois Cowan, 42, who owns the Century Cycles shops in the Cleveland area,
filed a complaint with the Federal Communications Commission asking it to
fine the company or take away the licenses of the three stations.

``They shouldn't be advocating things that kill people,'' Cowan said.

She says she's received more than 5,000 e-mails from cyclists about the
issue.

Dorothy Nance of Raleigh said she and her husband sold their Clear Channel
stock after she heard the bicycle comments on WDCG on Sept. 22.

Nance said the announcers were ``egging listeners on, by encouraging harm to
cyclists.'' Suggestions included throwing soft drink bottles, she said.

Thomas F. Valone, owner of seven outdoor clothing and equipment stores in
North Carolina, pulled ``a few thousand dollars'' worth of advertising from
the Raleigh station because of the comments.

FCC lawyers refuse to comment on specific complaints.

``We got a complaint about that and we are acting on that,'' FCC Chairman
Michael K. Powell told the cyclists.


AP reporter Paul Nowell in Charlotte, N.C., contributed to this report.

On the Net:

http://www.clearchannel.com/

http://www.fcc.gov

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