! APRIL 12, 2018 // 11 Pam Trenary and Barbara Hansel, among others are still on the air, though they now broadcast from the Tillicum House on 14th Street, a large Queen Anne donated to the station about 30 years ago by benefactor Helen Patti. Media blast To celebrate their upcoming 35th anniversary, Coast Community Radio is throwing a giant birthday bash 6 to 10 p.m. Saturday, April 14, in the Ruins at the Astor (1425 Commercial St.), and you and yours are invited. In the spirit of community, there will be a cash bar with brews from Fort George, spirits from Pilot House Distilling, sand- wiches from Good to Go, vintage vinyl spun by DJ Joey Altruda, and the venue space was donated by local developer Paul Caruana, who owns the building. Local print shop Anchor Graphics also provided promotional materials for the event. The party coincides with Astoria’s Sec- ond Saturday Art Walk, and KMUN is hap- py to poach any and all gallery gazers for a little bit of revelry. All ages are welcome. “We’ll be passing the hat, so to speak,” KMUN board president Joan Herman said. “But there’s no cover.” As the only community-run station in the Lower Columbia region, and a Na- tional Public Radio affiliate to boot, Coast Community Radio is annually threatened as Congress continues to float the idea of fully defunding the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. With the recent passing of the federal budget, for now, Herman said, “No news is good news,” but she stressed that it’s the support of the community that keeps KMUN running. Besides eclectic, original programming, with favorites like The Ship Report and Bedtime Stories, it is important to remem- ber that KMUN is also here for the commu- nity in times of crisis. “We’re there in a big storm, when a pet’s lost, when there’s an accident on the bridge,” Herman said. Despite a tree falling on the station during the Great Coastal Gale of 2007, Coast Community Radio continued to broadcast throughout the storm and its aftermath. Herman said she has heard from people who lived alone through this historic event that KMUN was the only human voice they heard for several days. “The live broadcasts of FisherPoets by KMUN has made this community event accessible to so many more,” said Clatsop Community College writing instructor Nancy Cook, who has long been involved with the FisherPoets Gathering. “And an arts event wouldn’t be an arts event without a Friday Arts Live & Local! interview with Carol Newman.” PHOTOS COURTESY GEORGE VETTER/CANNON-BEACH.NET ABOVE: From left: Doug Sweet, Mike Sroufe with musicians at sign-in April 17, 1983. (Mu- sicians, from left: Dave Moffitt, Dave Quinton, Polly Norris) LEFT: From left: Mike Sroufe, Harriet Baskas and Liam Dunne in 1983 during KMUN’s sign-on Staying the course Successful community radio requires just that: community. Herman, who also hosts the public affairs show “Perspec- tives,” urges potential volunteers to just drop by the station and see what opportuni- ties await them. One such holdover is station manager Graham Nystrom, who first got involved with the station through the encouragement of his partner, Jessamyn Grace, who hosts the late night show Day of the Velvet Voice every other Monday evening. “I made a donation of some much needed gear to the station, and started volunteering by cleaning and organizing the engineering space in the basement,” Nystrom recalled. “It turns out cleaning basements is a good way to win brownie points. The staff start- ed referring to me as ‘the guy that lives in the basement.’ When I would hear a blown speaker, I would fix it. When I saw a need, I would address it. About six months later, I was offered the job of operations manager. I was thrilled!” To remain relevant, Herman hopes more young people will get involved with Coast Community Radio to help usher in the next chapter of the people’s station. “Looking back at early program guides, the station is not so different now than it was back then,” Nystrom added. “And I ex- pect it won’t be so different 35 years in the future than it is now. I don’t predict music and news going out of style, but hey, it’s a brave new world, right?” Like the course of true love, Dunne said, “not all relationships run smoothly. But with a combination of desire and dis- cipline, and if the spirit is willing, we will stay the course for generations to come.” CW