Saturday night at mid-night these two Beasley owned stations will shut down. The land at the transmitter site has been sold and it is too expensive to relocate them.
If it's true (and there's nothing at the FCC site currently that indicates as much) that's a lot of lost revenue for Beasley. WHSR is leased to a Haitian group and WSBR is all pay for play.
I guess we'll all find out at midnight.There wouldn't likely be anything on the fcc site ahead of time... you'd see an STA request to be silent or license revocation request after the fact
If it's true (and there's nothing at the FCC site currently that indicates as much) that's a lot of lost revenue for Beasley. WHSR is leased to a Haitian group and WSBR is all pay for play.
I guess we'll all find out at midnight.
WSBR has 2 translators 96.9 and 103.9 wonder if there are plans for them?
Could they not just diplex from 1470s towers?
Could they not just diplex from 1470s towers?
Just found this. Tomorrow, one of WHSR's brokered non-Haitian talk shows is moving to 1470.
This says that the station — likely the Haitian programming — is moving to 1580. That would be WSRF, also with a Haitian format.
On November 9, a WSBR show host said that the station is going off the air because it won't have a transmitter site because the land was sold for development.
The Broward County assessor pegs its fair market value at a hair under $2 million. It is actually unincorporated.
That's pretty convincing. Thanks for digging into it.
With 980 off the air would WMYM 990 in Kendall be able to push more signal north and provide stronger day/night coverage into Broward and possibly Palm Beach?
And, having been a South Florida property owner at several addresses, I know that the appraised value is not equal to the market value. So the land may produce much more for Beasley.
"While tax rates vary in Florida from county to county, and from one local jurisdiction to another, realtor Rick Rapp notes on his website that there is a basic way of estimating a property's tax-assessed value vs. its market value. Usually, the former is going to be 80 percent of the latter, less any exemptions applied to the property."
Undeveloped land is sort of like stick value for a radio station. In my experience, a motivated buyer of undeveloped land, particularly one who needs a parcel for a large development, will pay much more than the assessed value.
I doubt Miami can make any increase of significance, as they also protect 990 in Orlando and, of course, at night, the entire Canadian border. They might, however, get a tiny bit more daytime coverage into southern Broward (but any gain would likely not warrant the huge cost of redesigning a directional system and doing the installation and proofing.)
As a note, I quoted the market value (assessed value was indeed at about $1.6 million).