If you wanted to learn how your community is handling the coronavirus pandemic but had trouble getting the information you needed, what would you do? If youâre like many of us, youâd probably turn to Google, send a couple emails and then, exasperated, call it a day.
If youâre Bill Trifiro, that would be an inadequate response.
Trifiro, a radio reporter based in Roanoke, Va., became frustrated last week when trying to report on the local situation. âI could get the Cleveland Clinic on the phone, but I couldnât get our local hospital system to answer questions,â he explained in a Monday morning interview.
He also identified the absence of hyper-local information and a need for connection. With his background and professional network, Trifiro decided a coronavirus radio station programmed by volunteers was a logical solution.
Trifiro then reached out to Rob Ruthenberg, âthe guy who knows everyone and can build radio stations,â as he put it.
Ruthenberg, who is a radio consultant and former GM, had been experiencing his own frustrations related to the pandemic and doing his part to help friends and neighbors navigate the situation. He noted the emphasis on national news and also was concerned about potential misinformation being spread on social media. Trifiro asked Ruthenberg to help create the format and recruit volunteers.
Next, Trifiro reached out to Flinn Broadcasting, which holds the license for WBZS(FM), a commercial station in Shawsville that had also just ended a local market agreement. According to Trifiro, Lonnie Flinn quickly agreed to let them use the 102.5 MHz signal and passed him on the engineers who could make it happen.
âThese guys are not just sharing their time and their energy and footing the electric bill, theyâre sharing their license,â said Ruthenberg. He and Trifiro understand the gravity of this. âItâs important to stress that these people are trusting us, and we owe it to them not to damage that,â Ruthenberg said.
SETTING STANDARDS
In order to ensure that their fellow volunteers are on the same page, theyâve instituted a training program to explain how to assess news sources and vet information, the standards talk.
About one-third of the volunteer staff are veteran broadcasters or have been trained so far, according to Trifiro. Both expect to get the rest up to speed quickly, and they also hope more people will join their ranks as the word spreads about the COVID Virginia project. As of Tuesday afternoon, COVID Virginia has about 20 volunteers who have signed on or expressed interest.
COVID Virginia is looking for more volunteers to host shows, screen calls, serve as producers, and do the innumerable tasks that keep a station running. Theyâre also asking people to do this work from their homes and with their own limited resources.
MAKING IT HAPPEN
In order to enable this collaboration from the technological side, Trifiro reached out to Backbone Networks Chief Technology Officer/Vice President George Capalbo. At Trifiroâs request, Backbone created a custom network and shared an app that enables volunteers to get on the air with uncompressed audio to ensure that the stationâs audio is broadcast-quality. All for free for the next 60 days, or perhaps even longer.
âWeâre planning on going through June 10, when Virginiaâs emergency order lifts,â Trifiro explained. âBut if it goes past that weâll go past that, and George has already said heâll go past that and it give it to us for free as well.â
Their appreciation for this generosity is apparent, and itâs not hard to understand why the pair sound a bit incredulous that theyâre actually pulling this off.
âThe hardest parts were outsourced and given to us for free! And people are giving of their time,â Trifiro said, explaining how some of their volunteers are also reporters from the local NPR affiliate or broadcasters who have come out of retirement to step up for their community.
Trifiro and Ruthenberg are also excited to partner with other radio stations and even a TV news team on the project, which will give them resources to cover news that would otherwise have gone unreported. Other stations understand that COVID Virginia isnât âtrying to be the competition,â Trifiro said, noting that it helps that the format has a designated sign off date (and they arenât planning to run commercials).
WDBJ(TV) channel 7 is providing audio for the 5â7 a.m. time slot, and 24/7 News Source â which is owned by iHeartMedia and for which Trifiro is also a correspondent â has donated top- and bottom-of-the-hour news updates, in addition to other audio as the COVID Virginia volunteers require. âWe want to be local, but itâs great to have the national information to âlocalizeâ and lean on for comparison,â Trifiro explained.
WHY RADIO, WHY HERE, WHY NOW?
Ruthenberg is in charge of volunteer recruitment. So far, heâs taken an individualized approach, going through his address book and calling up colleagues and reaching out to local colleges. Heâs gotten a communications professor and one student volunteer to sign on thus far, and he hopes others will follow.
âItâs a real opportunity for people who want to work in this environment to get a real first hand, brass tacks kind of handle on it. Itâs one of those things in this industry, your biggest learning experiences are under fire. This is no exception,â Ruthenberg said.
He is also clear why the COVID Virginia station is so important to southwest Virginia. Itâs simple: demographics. The area around Roanoke is popular among retirees and others older than 65, who are among those most vulnerable to COVID-19 â and those who can least afford to parse Facebook postsâ veracity.
âWe have this aging population that has this inherent disconnect with different forms of technology,â Ruthenberg explained. But he is confident radio can make a difference here. âWeâre bringing radio back to being the initially useful tool that it was intended to be.â
Trifiro agrees. âIn times of crisis, when thereâs epidemics, or now a pandemic, when thereâs horrible disasters, people need local radio.â
For this project in particular, Trifiro said, âPart of what weâre going to do is help dispel the stuff that youâre seeing on Facebook that isnât true, and weâre going to do it in a way that hopefully ties the community together and makes them feel not so alone in isolation, like the tag says, weâre together in isolation.â
As far as they know, COVID Virginia is the only station that will not only be covering the press conferences remotely and interviewing experts, but also taking calls from listeners who are seeking connection while practicing social distancing. (As of Tuesday afternoon, Trifiro was troubleshooting some issues with the phone system, but expected to have callers on the air by the Wednesday morning show.)
Ruthenberg is clear that the station will fight misinformation, but also seek to affirm peopleâs emotions, while learning from past mistakes. The fall out from the âwar of the worldsâ broadcast, for example, is exactly what they plan to avoid.
Just as Flinn, Capalbo and others contributed to getting COVID Virginia on the air, Trifiro and Ruthenberg want to help other broadcasters pursue similar initiatives.
âIf there are other communities in Virginia that are in need of this kind of sharing and information to cut down the isolation, we are definitely up for adding on,â Trifiro said. He added, âWeâre focused on southwest Virginia because thatâs where the terrestrial stick is, but weâre all Virginians.â
Trifiro said he hopes the radio station can emulate what FDR did during the Great Depression with his fireside chats, providing information and hope with a steady voice. However, he knows that COVID Virginiaâs audio signature will be quite different.
âWeâre going to be as professional as possible because weâre running a radio station, and we have that obligation,â Trifiro said. âBut at the same time, folks are going to hear my kid knocking on the door, the dogs barking, perhaps, and know that weâre going through what theyâre going through, which I think is unique.â
Itâs only been a week since he dreamed up the idea, but Trifiro says heâs already looking forward to taking the station off the air, which he and Ruthenberg say wonât happen âuntil we win. When we beat COVID-19.â
If youâre interested in learning more about COVID Virginia, visit https://www.covidvirginia.com, check out their Facebook group or tune your dial to WBSZ(FM) 102.5 in Roanoke, Va., area. If youâd like to volunteer for the station, email help@covidvirginia.com.
The post COVID Virginia to Help Listeners Be âTogether in Isolationâ appeared first on Radio World.
Emily M. Reigart