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PALMER -- The Federal Communications Commission has granted a Palmer-based nonprofit radio group, Radio Free Palmer, a construction permit to build a community radio station. Now comes the hard part, organizers say.The group this Saturday is kicking off a construction fundraiser at Vagabond Blues in downtown Palmer. Starting at 7 p.m. a troupe of local musicians and actors will entertain with music, skits and comedy. The group hopes to raise money for a studio and equipment. If fundraising goes well, the station could be up and running by 2009 although group organizers say 2010 is a more conservative estimate. Radio Free Palmer takes its name from the World War II-era broadcasts of Radio Free Europe, which broadcast CIA-approved news stories behind the Iron Curtain. But this group has a smaller focus -- to broadcast community news and locally picked music. Radio Free Palmer, formed in April 2005, has already been broadcasting Matanuska-Susitna Borough Assembly meetings and a few other public meetings via its Web site, www.radiofreepalmer.org. A handful of interviews and other podcasts are also available. Organizers say they want the community to direct future programming available online and over the airwaves."People came together because they felt a need for more local news, information, weather checks, sports, local music, local problem-solving and other important public safety needs that a community station can meet. As with the Girdwood and Talkeetna community stations, we will look to the people who live in Sutton, Palmer and in-between, including the people of Chickaloon and local schools to provide most of the programming," David Cheezem, the group's board president, stated in a written press release.