Tom Conklin, 45, told The Berkshire Eagle on Monday that he was informed on Nov. 30 that his job was
being eliminated.
That turned out to be his last day on the air handling
morning news updates for WBEC-FM ("Live 95.9") in Pittsfield as well
as WSBS (AM 860) in Great Barrington. He had started with WBEC in 1996 when it
was privately owned, as were all other Berkshire radio stations at the time.
In recent years, as Vox gradually cut its news staff from
five to two, Conklin had worked with news director Larry Kratka, a 25-year
veteran of local radio who started as the morning show host on WBEC-AM.
According to Peter Barry, vice president and market manager
of the Vox Radio Berkshire Group, a half-time news position is being created to
assist Kratka, but he declined to identify the person who has been hired or
transferred into the job.
Vox owns three signals in Pittsfield, two in Great
Barrington and two in North Adams.
"We don't comment on personnel issues," Barry
explained in a brief telephone interview, but added that the Vox stations are
"doing fine" despite the tough economy that has affected print, radio
and TV media nationwide.
In his statement, Barry declared: "Despite the
reduction in the position from full- to part-time, we remain committed to live
local programming. At a time when many stations across the country have
eliminated their news departments and switched to satellite programming, we
continue to employ a staff of eighteen full and part time employees dedicated
to live local programming."
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