Public access TV offers visitors a peek inside the studio

NORTH CANAAN — Tri-State Communications hosted an open house at its public access television studio at Geer Village on Saturday, Nov. 19.Tri-State co-owners Marshall Miles and Jill Goodman proudly showed off the facility, which Miles said has state-of-the-art digital equipment. In his tour of the master control room, for example, he noted that there used to be eight VHS vidoetape recorder/players. They have now been replaced by a single digital unit, which is the size of a single VHS player.Tri-State secured the television studio at Geer in 2002 and began to create public access programming on Comcast in the summer of 2003.Federal regulations require every cable television provider to have at least one channel devoted to locally produced content, Miles said. Members of the public can use the studio at Geer to create programs and deliver them to Comcast for viewing by Tri-state area customers.Public access television gives individuals and nonprofit organizations a way to share information within their communities. The public access channel (known as CATV-6) is on the air around the clock, seven days a week — even though shows often are repeated more than once throughout the day. Miles said the studio produces 8 to 10 hours of new content each week.Production has become much easier as the equipment has become more sophisticated.“When we take a camera on location, rather than shooting in the studio, everything is recorded on the same type of compact flashcard that’s used in digital photography,” Miles said. Each flashcard holds up to three and a half hours of information.Tri-State also includes the Sharon-based National Public Radio station WHDD (which is available on the AM and FM bands, as well as on the Internet at www.robinhoodradio.com).Goodman and Miles are dedicated to community service and to making local information immediately available to local residents.For almost 48 hours when snowstorm Alfred recently ravaged the Northwest Corner, “We had to stay on live because we were the only way many people were able to get information about what was happening,” Miles said. “People had portable radios and some turned their car radios on. Most AT&T land line telephone service worked so folks could call us to report information or ask questions.”To learn more about Tri-State Public Communications and CATV-6, call 860-364-4640.

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