"We can't survive because no one comes down here any more."
The best hope for the non-commercial station that played nostalgic music was for it to become a working museum again. Mrs Leonard said it would mean moving out of the village where costs were crippling Village Radio and finding a benefactor prepared to give them a new home, ideally near the Elms historic precinct.
They were now paying rent of about $700 a month plus rates, water and power - a far cry from the days when the council charged a peppercorn rent.
Mrs Leonard said Village Radio was paying too much for the amount of water it used. There was also a communal power charge for street lighting. "It is beyond the pale. We are tired of finding the money to keep going. We get a few donations but we keep on hitting the same people."
Historic Village team leader Michael Thomson defended the way village costs were allocated. They were apportioned on the basis of the floor area occupied by each tenant, a method used by commercial landlords. Costs included rates, water, insurance, security and rubbish removal.
"Everyone is treated the same," he said.
He said the village would be sorry to lose the radio station and he offered support to try and keep them viable. "It does not do us any good to see them fail."
The station's music librarian Cherry Feasey said it would be hugely upsetting if Village Radio was forced to close, for listeners and volunteers.
She said a lot of listeners were in rest homes and she often heard about how their faces lit up listening to the old tunes and their feet start tapping.
Announcer and technician Russ Bain said house-bound people often called to say how Village Radio was their lifeline.
"They say how much they love our music, it gives you the warm fuzzies."
Village Radio
• Run entirely by volunteers
• Music from the early 1930s to mid-1980s
• Frequency 1368 on the AM band