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| Bill Becker with wife Bernadette Becker and their granddaughter Bella. |   
 
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| Bill playing his washtub bass at a Terry Cassidy's Superbowl Pickin' Party for Habitat for Humanity. |   
 
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| Bill beachcombing in the Marquesas. |  | For 30-some years Bill Becker, news director at Lower Keys–based U.S.  1 Radio 104.1 FM, has provided a soothing, authoritative presence that  appeals to Florida Keys listeners. Surprisingly, though his smooth voice  and comfortable manner make him a broadcasting natural, working in  radio was not his life’s goal.A native of New York, Becker earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in  marine biology. Though he wrote for his high school newspaper, he had  no radio experience until he came to the Florida Keys and his love of  science led him into broadcasting.  	  After graduating in 1971, he  accepted a job offer from the Lower Keys’ Newfound Harbor Marine  Institute at Sea Camp.“It was my sole job offer in 1971,” Becker said, “so I drove down with  all my belongings in a 1964 Chevy and I worked there for 10 years.”He taught marine biology to kids and, through outreach programs, became  involved in local organizations. He even served as president of the  Lower Keys Chamber of Commerce.That’s when he caught the attention of David Freeman, a local  insurance agent with a broadcasting background who had started a small  Key West station called WIIS. Freeman asked Becker to do a 15-minute  on-air segment about his work at Sea Camp.“I would record my segment on cassette with a hand-held tape recorder  and mail it to David, who would play it every Wednesday at 12:15 p.m.,”  said Becker. “It could barely be heard in Big Pine, but still it gave me  the bug for radio — I felt I was creating something positive that  people appreciated.”When U.S. 1 Radio started up in 1980, Becker went to the station and  offered to do local news. That was the beginning of his career there. He  described radio in those days as a bare-bones affair. The evolution of  U.S. 1 started in 1985 when Crain Communications bought the station and  invested in new equipment and a new tower. In 2004, Vox Communications  bought the station from Crain and continued to expand it.So committed was U.S. 1 to local news and the community that when  Hurricane Georges impacted the Lower Keys in 1998 Becker and his fellow  staffers stayed on the air throughout, providing information and comfort  to listeners during and after the storm.Becker credits the station’s incredible team commitment, stellar  facilities and sturdy generator (nicknamed Zippy) for making it possible  to stay on the air. As well as the only information resource, U.S. 1  was the connecting source between the public, local emergency management  personnel and the sheriff’s office.“Our role in the recovery was problem solving, and the outpouring from  the community was very heartwarming,” Becker said. “It was quite an  experience to hear people’s voices and know that we were aiding in  keeping them calm and giving them information.”One of his oddest on-air experiences during Georges was receiving a  call from his neighbor, who told Becker that half the roof of his home  was gone.“That really hit home for me,” the newsman said.   In 1999, U.S. 1  received a prestigious Edward R. Murrow Award from the Radio Television  Digital News Association for outstanding coverage during Hurricane  Georges.“Attending the black-tie event to receive the award, and meeting the  giants of broadcast news like Walter Cronkite, was a very humbling  experience,” said Becker. “To this day, people in the Keys still come up  and thank me for what we did and continue to do.”Later, the station’s efforts were featured in an episode of The Weather Channel’s series “Storm Stories.”Becker’s work also has led to involvement in other historic moments.  He’s done broadcasts in Cuba as part of humanitarian efforts by a local  group taking medical supplies and food to the island. And he simulcast  live from Key West’s Mallory Square in 1982 when the Florida Keys  seceded from the Union and formed the independent Conch Republic.In addition, he’s co-founder of one of the Lower Keys’ signature events:  the annual Underwater Music Festival that spotlights coral reef  preservation. Each July, the quirky underwater broadcast draws hundreds  of diving and snorkeling enthusiasts, as well as national and  international media coverage.Today, Becker broadcasts the news and hosts U.S. 1’s 90-minute  “Morning Magazine” each weekday morning, showcasing local issues and  events through commentary and on-air interviews. He’s quick to praise  the station’s evening newsman, Ezra Marcus, calling him “a real  television and radio pro.”After nearly 40 years in the island chain, Becker appreciates his  tranquil existence on Sugarloaf Key with his wife Bernadette and two  daughters and a granddaughter close by.“I live on a wonderful wooded acre with a pool, a pond and a great  garden that I get to tend to year-round,” he said. “I have a great  life.” |