November 10, 2007

The Favor Bank

The Favor Bank

[The letter was published in the Boston Herald on Thursday November 1, 2007.]

Howie Carr bashed Massachusetts political hacks for 20 years. They appointed
judges who say he cannot work where he wants and may not work temporarily until
the appeal is heard. Is it my imagination or are these political appointees
doing a favor for the political hacks who run the MA government by keeping this
critic off of the air?

Roy Bercaw, Editor ENOUGH ROOM

Judge says Carr can't move early
Talk show host must wait for ruling before making any switch

By Diedtra Henderson,
Boston Globe Staff
October 30, 2007

An Appeals Court justice slammed the door on conservative talk show host Howie
Carr's hopes of getting onto WTKK-FM soon.

In a nine-page ruling issued yesterday, the judge denied Carr's bid to work for
the station of his choice as his legal case winds through the courts, and
refused to kick parts of the case up to a full panel of appellate judges.

"I deny each request," wrote Judge Andrew Grainger.

On the question of passing parts of the case to additional appeals justices,
Grainger wrote "there is no good reason for opening the door to multiple
appeals."

The speedy rebuke marked the latest legal setback for Carr, who seeks to bolt
from WRKO-AM for the rival FM station. "We're disappointed in the ruling, but we
still believe that the final outcome will be in Howie Carr's favor," said Carr's
spokeswoman, Nancy J. Sterling.

"We respect the court's decision, but we continue to believe that Howie Carr
should be able to work for the station he chooses. We are keeping all options
open as we decide how to move forward," Greater Media, which owns WTKK, said in
a statement.

At issue is language in Carr's contract with WRKO, owned by Entercom Boston,
that allows the station to match a rival's job offer.

When WRKO matched the $6.75 million contract Carr had received from WTKK,
Entercom contended it had extended its contract with the popular talk show host
by five years for the same pay.

Suffolk Superior Court Judge Allan van Gestel agreed, sided with WRKO, and said
Carr had erred in seeking a rival offer while still under contract.

Carr's lawyers appealed van Gestel's ruling and sought permission for Carr to
work for the station of his choice while his appeal was under consideration.

Shepard Davidson, the lead Entercom lawyer on the case, said yesterday's ruling
was "a big win because I don't believe he has any resort that could give him a
quick victory, at this point."

Carr has remained off the air since late September, when his contract with WRKO
was due to expire. Entercom has already put Carr on notice that he could be
liable for significant damages if he doesn't fulfill his contract.

"Is he going to stick this out for, potentially, years and not work?" Davidson
asked. "We can't force him to come back. We hope he comes back. We want him to
come back. He's under contract to come back. That decision is up to him.
Hopefully, now, he will come back."

Diedtra Henderson can be reached at dhenderson@globe.com.
� Copyright 2007 Globe Newspaper Company.

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