Articles

Gottingen’s Still Got a Voice


Seth Glasgow will never forget the day ‘Got A Voice’, the official radio station of the Gottingen 250 festival, started broadcasting. He was an intern helping to run the show when interference from their radio equipment triggered the fire alarms in the North Memorial Public Library where they set up. Everyone evacuated, and once they were back inside up and running again, the alarms went off a second time.

“At that point, the library said they had to shut everything down.” says Glasgow.

They had to find another location to keep broadcasting for the day. But after that, the rest of the week went smoothly. More than smooth; the community broadcast was so popular, so well-received, the group will continue broadcasting as Halifax’s newest community radio station.

Got A Voice, a project of iMOVe Arts Association, was born of a desire for the youth and community members in the Gottingen area to tell their stories during the recent celebration of Gottingen Street’s 250th year.

Says Glasgow, “we had random people come in and give shout-outs or just sit down and talk with us. We had people from all over the neighbourhood come in, and I think that’s what made it successful, because anyone could literally walk in and say what they wanted to say.”

Charlene Gagnon, the Youth Program Director at iMOVe, says people can expect to see a website for the station by the end of October, and to start listening again in November.

The FM channel they were using during the festival is designated for special events only, and applying to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) for their own channel is an expensive, two year process. In the meantime, they will broadcast from the web, both live and with podcasts, from the Ubinacke Centre for Community Development 24 hours a day, seven days a week, playing their favourite music and focusing on the voices that aren’t usually found in the media.

Says Gagnon, “If people want to learn something about cultural communities in their own city that never get air time, that aren’t part of the mainstream, then they should tune in.”

Radio is not a dying medium. The CRTC projects a high demand for FM radio frequencies in the next year, and it’s a proven tool for community development all over the world. The group is applying for more funding from the United Way, and donations are always welcome.

The station will continue the conversations that began during the festival, and give youth a platform to share their stories and gain media skills while they do it. The youth know their neighbourhood has a bad reputation, but they’re eager to change that,

“People just assume it’s a lot of negativity down here” says intern Jourdin Symonds, “I just think the radio will give people a chance to voice their opinions, things that might be on their mind, things that could fix the community, just issues in general, and I think that will give people a lot more pride, and I think that’ll slowly change the community.”

Glasgow agrees, “It’s not a bad community, and Got A Voice is proof of that.” he says. “Even little kids no older than six or seven are getting on the radio, talking, just having fun. Because that’s what Got A Voice is about. It’s not a dangerous neighbourhood. We’re all good people.”

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s