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Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Ron DeLucia and Art Deluca think they will steal from the next access station too!

The Lies of TV 3 Medford

Fraud Board Member, dishonest Art Deluca, thinks he is going to be part of a new TV station


DELUCA WRITES:

may (edit; Deluca doesn't know how to spell) I remind you that while the dissolution process has begun fior MCC, we are still conidered (sic) in existence, and the board still exists until that dissolution process is complete. Yes, the dissolution was entirel (SIC; who edits that clown Deluca?  Doria Alberg?) our choice, we could have chose to let the non-profit go on paying rent and such, selling off our asset to pay the rent when the money ran out, and continuing to do so until theor (SIC) was absolutely nothing left to pass on to the City. We chose not to take that selfish, vindictive route. That equipment will come in handy when some of the board (the stronger members) reorganizes into a new non profit. Then, free of the weaker indecisive board members who were holding the corporation back, we will make our bid to be the new public access provider for Medford. Ron DeLucia and myself agree that this is the way for us to go in the best interests of Medford and our TV3 membership. So see you at the hearings for the new station "managers", my fellow competitor.  
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Right.  Deluca said that the city doesn't need public access.  Then that dirty rat who hasn't seen an elder person he doesn't want to bash (Pat F. good case in point) thinks the Mayor is going to put a lunatic like himself back in power?

They will be banned for the next 5 years!


Community access
DeLuca, who currently sits on the embattled community access station TV3’s Board of Directors, said if he is elected mayor, he will eliminate funding for public, education and governmental (PEG) access stations and instead steer those dollars to the city’s general budget.
“I would want to do away with PEG channels so the money can come to the city,” said DeLuca. “You could still use that money to fund education at the high school — teach them how to put video on the Internet. We’d be freeing up the money to do other things with it.”